The 3-inch long teeth are on display at the Melbourne Museum. No, this isn't a publicity stunt for the new movie "Meg." A teacher and fossil enthusiast found a giant set of prehistoric shark teeth ...
Millions of years ago, a series of ancient seas covered and then receded from the landmass forming present-day Florida. Since a shark can drop many thousands of teeth in a lifetime, dark-hued, ...
At the American Museum of Natural History in 1996, jaws of a hammerhead shark on display bore the misidentification of “Carcharhinus sp.” One visitor knew better, tore a piece of scrap paper and ...
Lying on the creek bed, dark blue against the pebbled bottom, the shark tooth is unmistakable. The tooth is small, about an inch and a half long, but the point is still sharp to the touch. It is ...
Giant sharks once swam the seas that covered what’s now eastern Idaho, and scientists have new proof: A spiral-shaped array of fossilized shark teeth was uncovered by a mining crew in a heap of ...
A married couple have found a "massive" fossilized great white tooth on a North Carolina beach that came from a huge shark. Experts told Newsweek that the white shark in question could have measured ...
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