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- Summerville trip, Summer 2025 - Fossil Hunting Trips - The Fossil Forum
Went on a weekend trip to south Carolina this weekend for an annual shark tooth hunting trip It went very well, especially after are last trip where the best thing we found was a desori with a broken root We found two larger megs which were both broken, but the best find was an Angustidens in n
- Michigan Shark Teeth - Fossil Hunting Trips - The Fossil Forum
I don't know Michigan was high and dry from the Mesozoic and later, the ages for these types of teeth (except for the great lakes which are fresh water) These look like shark teeth that are found in coastal areas,Tx, La, Fla, the Carolinas and California
- 2 Productive Trips to Ramanessin Brook, NJ - The Fossil Forum
My past two trips to Ramanessin Brook in Holmdel, NJ have been especially productive Resulting in much larger teeth and much more diverse finds, Ramanessin has proven to be a much better spot than Big Brook for me Here are the finds from the first trip: Many large anterior goblin shark teeth; a
- Finally . . . a discussion of fossil sharks from Morocco and transitional . . .
The chart at the end of this proposes that P orientalis is a descendant of C Appendiculata There is a similar family tree on pg 132 of Joe Cocke's book, Fossil Shark Teeth of the World Mark Renz also agrees with this theory in his Megalodon: Hunting the Hunter
- Shark, Ray, Fish, And Other Micros From Joshua Creek In Florida
I found shark, ray and fish fossils, a small mammal tooth, several crustacean specimens and maybe a Native American bead I am posting some of the nicer and more unusual specimens which I found which range in size from 2mm to 13mm
- A Quick Trip to Greens Mill Run with a Few Surprise Finds (And a Very . . .
A Quick Trip to Green's Mill Run with a Few Surprise Finds (And a Very Brief Aurora, NC Visit) belemnite cretaceous gmr greens mill run north carolina peedee formation pliocene shark teeth skolithos yorktown formation
- What was a bourlettes purpose? - The Fossil Forum
I know the bourlette on a shark tooth is the chevron shaped material between the enamel and the root, but what was it actually? Clearly it is not root or enamel, but did it serve a specific purpose?
- Megalodon Shark tooth - Fossil ID - The Fossil Forum
I found this Meg tooth a few days ago at Beverly Beach right by Newport, Oregon I wasn’t 100% sure it was a tooth till I very carefully exposed part of the tooth’s surface and serrated edge but the rock it’s encased in is incredibly hard to remove, and I don’t want to go any further or it might
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