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Giant Armadillo Atlas Vertebrae

$40.00

Giant Armadillo Atlas Vertebrae, 2-1/4×2-7/8″
The number of vertebrae in Glyptodon was 13 which were present consecutively. Of the thirteen vertebrae, four are so close together that they are almost indiscernible. The other vertebrae, barring these 4, are connected by means of sutures. As they approach the posterior, these vertebrae are spaced further apart.

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Description

Glyptodon is a genus of glyptodont, an extinct group of large, herbivorous armadillos, that lived from the Pliocene, around 3.2 million years ago, to the early Holocene, around 11,000 years ago, in Brazil, Uruguay, Paraguay, Bolivia, Peru, Argentina, and Colombia. It is one of, if not the, best known genus of glyptodont. Glyptodon has a long and storied past, being the first named extinct cingulate and the type of genus of the subfamily Glyptodontinae. Fossils of Glyptodon have been recorded as early as 1814 from Pleistocene aged deposits from Uruguay, though many were incorrectly referred to the ground sloth Megatherium by early paleontologists.

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