- Sharktooth Island: Tips and finds from my four years in Wilmington, NC . . .
Shark Tooth Island is located in Wilmington, NC, just off the shore from River Road Park If you're standing at the boat ramp facing the river, the island directly in front of you is Keg Island At low tide, the upriver side of the island can have some specimens to collect, but I never had as good of luck on Keg Island as I did on Shark Tooth
- Creeks rivers ECT near or in indiana to find shark teeth?
Any shark teeth you may find would be from the Paleozoic, rather than the Mesozoic or Cenozoic And those don't look much like typical shark teeth PALEOZOIC SHARK TEETH You would have to travel to the East Coast of America, or Florida, or Texas, or California, to be able to find shark teeth like they find
- Shark Vert Vs Fish Vert - Questions Answers - The Fossil Forum
Shark vertebrae tend to be preserved as just the centrum (the hockey puck-like disk) with two openings on top and two on the bottom where the hemal and neural arches were attached The arches were cartilaginous in life and disintegrate quickly after death
- First Beach Trip of the Summer - The Fossil Forum
On Saturday me and my family went out to Micklers beach, which is well known for shark teeth, for our first beach trip this summer We've been quite a few times, so I wasn't expecting very much, just a handfull of teeth, maybe one or two nice Sand Tigers, but around five minutes into the search I
- NJ Miocene Eocene find - Fossil ID - The Fossil Forum
I said this based on the njfossils net site showing fish tooth as common for Shark river and the photo looks like my barracuda teeth from peace river FL This is way more slender than my Cuda teeth 1
- Shark tooth in ammonite - Fossil ID - The Fossil Forum
To my knowledge, Squalicorax is the only Cretaceous shark in North America with serrated teeth, so if you've got serrations that's a good guess That being said, I think the ridges on this tooth look more like wear than true serrations, and the overall shape seems much more consistent with a taxon in the Cretolamna Cretoxyrhina Cretodus
- Black shark tooth identification - Fossil ID - The Fossil Forum
C = Galeocerdo sp , possibly G cuvier (tiger shark) D = Hemipristis serra (snaggletooth shark) E = Carcharhinus sp (gray requiem sharks); it's possible some of the narrower cusped teeth are lemon sharks (Negaprion sp ) instead, but I think they're Carcharhinus sp lowers
- Tiny shark tooth - Fossil ID - The Fossil Forum
The pictures are kind of blurry, but it looks like a lower tooth from a lemon shark (Negaprion brevirostris) to me From your previous posts, it looks like that area is Miocene or earlier 1
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