Fossils
(317 upcoming items)Fossils
Fossils have given valuable clues to Earth's past, making them great collectible items. Paleontologists and collectors worldwide are constantly seeking hidden treasures with a strong interest in dinosaurs and other fossil giants, making them collectibles of great value. In order to be qualified as a fossil, an object must be at least several thousand years old. However, the oldest fossils have been determined to be about three and a half billion years old. A fossil is created when a plant or animal that died millions of years ago leaves behind a skeleton, bones, or other organic matter. When these bones or organic materials disintegrate or fall apart over a long time, they sometimes get preserved in a stone or petrified into a hard substance, allowing people to find their impressions or remnants. A fossil can be anything, from a preserved footprint to arthropods, fish teeth, mollusks, animal teeth, dinosaur bones, and plant fossils. Fossils can be preserved in ice, river sediment, volcanic ash, tar, desert sandstone, globs of hardened tree sap etc. They are often categorized as body fossils, remains of plants and anima











![Fossil Megalodon Shark Tooth: Pliocene Epoch, circa 5.6 million years B.P. A Carcharocles megalodon shark tooth, with good polished tooth enamel. 144 grams, 10 cm (4 in.). [No Reserve] From a Lincolnshire, UK, collection. TimeLine](https://p1.liveauctioneers.com/1191/405225/225127631_1_x.jpg?height=280&quality=70&sharpen=true&version=1769779778&width=280)
![Mosasaur 'Marine Dinosaur' Tooth on Composite Matrix: Cretaceous Period, circa 145-66 million years B.P. A Mosasaur prognathodon tooth with some root set in a composite sandstone matrix. 524 grams, 13.4 cm (5 1/4 in.). [No Reserve] From a Cambridgeshire,](https://p1.liveauctioneers.com/1191/405225/225127628_1_x.jpg?height=280&quality=70&sharpen=true&version=1769779778&width=280)
![Fossil Megalodon Shark Tooth: Pliocene Epoch, circa 5.6 million years B.P. A Carcharocles megalodon shark tooth, with serrations and polished tooth enamel. 65 grams total, 82 mm (3 1/4 in.). [No Reserve] From a Lincolnshire, UK, c](https://p1.liveauctioneers.com/1191/405225/225127615_1_x.jpg?height=280&quality=70&sharpen=true&version=1769779778&width=280)
![Fossil Bison Molar Tooth: Pleistocene Epoch, 2.6 million-11,700 years B.P. From a young adult Bison antiquus. 44.9 grams, 65 mm (2 1/2 in.). [No Reserve] From Central Nebraska, USA. From the private collection of Kenneth Machi](https://p1.liveauctioneers.com/1191/405225/225127575_1_x.jpg?height=280&quality=70&sharpen=true&version=1769779778&width=280)
![Mosasaur 'Marine Dinosaur' Fossil Tooth Pair: Cretaceous Period, circa 145-65 million years B.P. Comprising two teeth, both showing good enamel. 68 grams total, 47 mm each (1 7/8 in.). [2, No Reserve] From Morocco. From a Cambridgeshire, UK, coll](https://p1.liveauctioneers.com/1191/405225/225127568_1_x.jpg?height=280&quality=70&sharpen=true&version=1769779778&width=280)
![Fossil Otodus Obliquus Shark Tooth Group: Eocene Period, circa 56-33 million years B.P. Comprising three tooth specimens, each set on a sandstone matrix. 727 grams total, 77-85 mm (3 - 3 3/8 in.). [3, No Reserve] From a Cambridgeshire, UK, co](https://p1.liveauctioneers.com/1191/405225/225127551_1_x.jpg?height=280&quality=70&sharpen=true&version=1769779778&width=280)
![Fossil Mosasaur 'Marine Dinosaur' Tooth Group: Cretaceous Period, circa 145-65 million years B.P. Comprising three Mosasaur Prognathodon teeth, each showing good enamel. 60 grams total, 46-65 mm (1 3/4 - 2 1/2 in.). [3, No Reserve] From Ouled Abdo](https://p1.liveauctioneers.com/1191/405225/225127533_1_x.jpg?height=280&quality=70&sharpen=true&version=1769779778&width=280)
![Mosasaur 'Marine Dinosaur' Composite Fossil Jaw Fragment Display with Teeth: Cretaceous Period, circa 145-65 million years B.P. A composite matrix set with seven Mosasaur prognathodon teeth. 1.66 kg, 20.5 cm (8 in.). [No Reserve] From Morocco. From a Cambridgeshire, UK, collec](https://p1.liveauctioneers.com/1191/405225/225127527_1_x.jpg?height=280&quality=70&sharpen=true&version=1769779778&width=280)
![Mosasaur 'Marine Dinosaur' Tooth with Root: Cretaceous Period, circa 145-66 million years B.P. A Mosasaur prognathodon tooth with some root, showing good enamel; repaired. 120 grams, 13.2 cm (5 1/4 in.). [No Reserve] From a Cambridgeshire, UK,](https://p1.liveauctioneers.com/1191/405225/225127516_1_x.jpg?height=280&quality=70&sharpen=true&version=1769779778&width=280)







