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Showing results for tags 'lee creek'.
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From the album: Mexx's Megs
4.74" cream coloured meg with cappuccino bourlette from the famous Lee Creek mine. -
A very uncommon species at Lee Creek. From the Pleistocene James City Formation, great whites are always nice to find.
- 2 comments
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- great white
- carcharodon
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This rare Lee Creek Megachasma was confirmed as a juvenile Megachasma tooth by Dr. Kenshu Shimada. One of the worlds foremost experts on Megachasma. One of the rarest of the Lee Creek teeth. It was a very unexpected find.
- 1 comment
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- 2
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- tff0dr055bc
- miocene
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This amazing patho is one of my favorite teeth.
- 6 comments
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- tiger shark
- lee creek
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This near perfect Notorynchus is a male, lower tooth.
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A nice upper parasymphyseal cow shark
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- cow shark
- parasymphyseal
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A nice Lee Creek croc tooth.
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A nice Notorhynchus upper from the famous Lee Creek Mine.
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A very nice example of a Lee Creek Squatina. An uncommon tooth.
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- angel shark
- lee creek
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This Devil Ray tooth, Plinthicus stenodon is a common found in some Pungo River sediments. It is also found in the Pliocene Yorktown, but is much less common there. Most found are damaged in some way. Being undamaged makes this specimen special.
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- tff0dr058bc
- miocene
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My first and to date only Lee Creek Cookiecutter tooth. A rare species from Lee Creek.
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- tff0dr054bc
- lee creek
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This small (6mm long) Hemipristis is slightly pathological. Hemi patho's are not uncommon at Lee Creek.
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- snaggletooth
- hemi
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This tiny sevengill shark tooth is the smallest I have ever found. At 8mm as a lower tooth it must have been a juvenile or even new born shark.
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A very nice whale shark tooth from Lee Creek.
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- whale shark
- lee creek
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This is a small ?posterior meg tooth. Found in spoil piles from the Lee Creek Mine.
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A very rare and nice, small megalodon symphyseal tooth. A tooth position that was not in all megs.
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- tff0dr049bc
- meg
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Self Collected at the Lee Creek Mine. This hemi lower symphyseal has great coloration.
- 2 comments
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Nice little C. catticus collected from the Lee Creek Spoil Piles. An uncommon find.
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Lee Creek Cetorhinus (Basking Shark) teeth are extremely rare. While the Oligocene specimens and some Miocene locations have been assigned to C. parvus and the later (Pliocene-extant) have been assigned to C. maximus; the Lee Creek teeth have not been assigned to species level. The west coast species from the middle Miocene Sharktooth Hill Bonebeds have been assigned as a new species C. huddlestoni (Welton, 2014); and is a very common tooth there.
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- tffodro44bc
- basking shark
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Self Collected from sediments from the Lee Creek Mine on 12 June 2010.
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- tooth
- tff0dr027lc
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Self Collected from spoil piles from the Lee Creek Mine.
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- tff0dr020bc
- meg
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Self Collected in the Lee Creek Mine
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Self Collected from the Lee Creek Mine
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- mako
- tffodro18bc
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Self Collected in the Lee Creel Mine during my very first trip into it.