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Megalodon Fossil Shark Tooth

Megalodon Fossil Shark Tooth
Large View
Beaufort County - South Carolina, U.S.A

Dimensions

Approximately:
4.8"/120mm
Weight:
201g

Options

Megalodon Carcharocles Tooth Image 2 Megalodon Carcharocles Tooth Image 2 - BN0045 (A)
£650.00
Megalodon Carcharocles Tooth Image 2 Megalodon Carcharocles Tooth Image 2 - BN0045 (C)
£650.00
Megalodon Carcharocles Tooth Image 4 Megalodon Carcharocles Tooth Image 4 - BN0045 (B)
£650.00

Description

condition report

A fine dark grey tooth. Showing a very good sheen to the enamel, overall a very attractive patination. Displays distinct serrations. The enamel is good and intact. The usual stress or ageing lines present. some slight chips to the serrations appear to be historic life wear. Root suggest this to be a upper anterior tooth.

Megalodon Facts

Biggest tooth ever found 7.25inches. Number of teeth in the jaw at least 250, two rows of 46 teeth, times approx 6 or 7 files, continually growing. Theorists determine the main food prey were whales. Bite radius approximately 10 feet. Anterior upper teeth tend to be more curved. The most complete set of Megalodon teeth found to date was a row of 38 teeth of a possible 46.

Megalodon History

Megalodon meaning Giant Tooth, a well preserved Megalodon tooth. Now extinct

Megalodons teeth were located in rows, rotating forward when lost like modern day sharks, easily dislodged when grabbing prey.

As sharks have mostly cartilage which does not fossilise well, remains are scarce, apart from great numbers of teeth occasionally found in mass depositions, this actioned by current preferences.

Each individual Shark having thousands of teeth in its life time, [as these Meg teeth are found up to 7 inches, max length tip to longest root end, measured diagonally], scientist estimate the shark could easily have been up to 50/60ft and 50tonne mass.

Consider a modern Gt. White tooth, averaging, 1.5 inches. About a 25ft shark at 3 tons.

Megalodon hunted whales, probably sperm whales of the time

Order:

Lamniformes|Family: Lamnidae (genus Carcharodon) or Otodontidae (genus Carcharocles)

Geological Age:

Miocene and Pliocene Epochs. 24 - 1.6 mya

Tel: + 44 [0]1772 861326 and 07949009093 Email: fossilstore@aol.com