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CH4ShotCaller

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Found many shark teeth in South Carolina and Florida decades ago. Identification of the teeth has always been a challenge, even today, trying to use available charts to identify these 3 is difficult (for me). Knowing TFF has many shark enthusiasts, this should be a cakewalk. These teeth are from a Miocene bone bed, Astoria Formation, Washington state. Found scattered in the matrix surrounding cetacean bones, otolith, fish scales, Calionopsis claws and carbonized wood. Thanks for the help! Oh, these are 1/2 - 3/4 inches.

20201111_122945.jpg

Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new.
-Albert Einstein

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The first is Jaekelotodus by me, second looks like Odontaspis or Hypotodus (sand tiger). 

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2 hours ago, D.N.FossilmanLithuania said:

The first is Jaekelotodus by me, second looks like Odontaspis or Hypotodus (sand tiger). 

Thanks! 

Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new.
-Albert Einstein

crabes-07.gif

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