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Stolokrosuchus lapparenti tooth from Niger
The partial tooth of an extinct crocodile from the Early Cretaceous (approx. 110 million years old) called Stolokrosuchus lapparenti. Origin of Fog: Gadafoua, Tenere, Niger. The dimensions of the tooth are approximately: 25 mm x 11.5 mm x 10 mm. Weight approx.: 3 grams + packaging. I am giving the Stolokrosuchus tooth in a storage box approx. 85 mm x 111 mm x 23 mm in size.
Stolokrosuchus is an extinct genus of neosuchian crocodylomorph that lived during the Early Cretaceous. Its fossils, including a skull with a long thin snout and bony knobs on the prefrontal, have been found in Niger. Stolokrosuchus was described in 2000 by Hans Larsson and Boubacar Gado. The type species is S. lapparenti. They initially described it as related to Peirosauridae, if not a member of that family. One study has shown it to be related to Elosuchus. However, more recent works usually find Stolokrosuchus to be one of the basalmost neosuchian, only distantly related to the elosuchid or pholidosaurid, Elosuchus. It was a semiaquatic crocodylomorph