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Carcharodon hubbelli (tip)


Megatooth Collector

This is a 2.8" tooth from Chile of the transition species between the ancient broad-toothed mako and great white shark. Notice the serrations along the superior portion of the tooth that gradually decrease towards the point, and is non-serrated near the tip.

Here are a couple of lines borrowed from the Buried Treasure Fossils website about this transition tooth:

"C. carcharias transition teeth have recently been renamed to C. hubbelli in honor of Gordon Hubbell who found a complete jaw / partial skeleton in Peru. This find also further solidifies popular opinion that the Great White shark is a descendent of the extinct Big-tooth Mako shark (Isurus xiphodon or Isurus hastalis). Hubbell's skeleton was dated to the late Miocene (6.5 MMYA) which puts it as an intermediate between the Big-tooth Mako and the Great White shark which evolves in the Pliocene, approximately 3 MMYA".

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From the album:

Great White Shark and Ancestors

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Great info Megatooth Collector. I've been looking for some transition examples of Mako to Great White. Really nice presentation!

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Megatooth Collector

Posted

I am glad you found it helpful. Not sure if you saw, but there is also a couple of photos that shows the progress in order on here with two intermediates in the middle.

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Fossil-Hound

Posted

Wow this is gorgeous. Thank you for sharing this rare tooth.

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