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This is a piece of Late Jurassic aged, Dinosaur “Gem Bone / Gembone”, polished on one face to reveal the wonderful internal cell structure. The back face and edges have been left “raw” to maintain it’s natural form and the slab has been stabilized. Agatized dinosaur bone is a rare form of fossilized dinosaur bone where the original fossilized bone has been naturally replaced with silica based compounds such as agate, jasper, chalcedony, or opal.
AGE/ERA
Jurassic 155 Million Years Old
LOCATION
Legally Collected on Private Land in Moffat, Colorado
FORMATION
Morrison
DIMENSIONS:
Length: 9”, Width: 6.25", Depth: 6 mm
Weight: 1 lb
This is a piece of Late Jurassic aged, Dinosaur “Gem Bone / Gembone”, polished on one face to reveal the wonderful internal cell structure. The back face and edges have been left “raw” to maintain it’s natural form and the slab has been stabilized. Agatized dinosaur bone is a rare form of fossilized dinosaur bone where the original fossilized bone has been naturally replaced with silica based compounds such as agate, jasper, chalcedony, or opal.
AGE/ERA
Jurassic 155 Million Years Old
LOCATION
Legally Collected on Private Land in Moffat, Colorado
FORMATION
Morrison
DIMENSIONS:
Length: 9”, Width: 6.25", Depth: 6 mm
Weight: 1 lb
This is a piece of Late Jurassic aged, Dinosaur “Gem Bone / Gembone”, polished on one face to reveal the wonderful internal cell structure. The back face and edges have been left “raw” to maintain it’s natural form and the slab has been stabilized. Agatized dinosaur bone is a rare form of fossilized dinosaur bone where the original fossilized bone has been naturally replaced with silica based compounds such as agate, jasper, chalcedony, or opal.
AGE/ERA
Jurassic 155 Million Years Old
LOCATION
Legally Collected on Private Land in Moffat, Colorado
FORMATION
Morrison
DIMENSIONS:
Length: 9”, Width: 6.25", Depth: 6 mm
Weight: 1 lb
Agatized Dinosaur Gem Bone
Dinosaur Gembone from the Morrison formation of Colorado is either found as fragments on the surface from bones or partial bones that have long since been destroyed by exposure to the elements, or as broken, tumbled, chunks found in the event layers of the quarry. Determining the type of dinosaur these agatized bones come from is difficult in this formation, but can be possible to determine based on cell size and outer appearance of the bone.