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Fin Lover

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Sorry to post again already, but my husband is getting jealous of my finds and wants me to ask what his are. :rolleyes:Both were found in Summerville, SC. I'm not sure if ID is possible since they are broken pieces, but maybe one is large enough. I'm thinking Angustiden on the larger one, but could be way off.  Thanks for the help; you all are great!

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Fin Lover

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My favorite things about fossil hunting: getting out of my own head, getting into nature and, if I’m lucky, finding some cool souvenirs.

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12 hours ago, Fin Lover said:

Sorry to post again already, but my husband is getting jealous of my finds and wants me to ask what his are. :rolleyes:Both were found in Summerville, SC. I'm not sure if ID is possible since they are broken pieces, but maybe one is large enough. I'm thinking Angustiden on the larger one, but could be way off.  Thanks for the help; you all are great!

 

Nothing to be sorry for.... we enjoy your requests.. and it gives us something to do..

 

Well, I have Megalodons from Summerville,  and based on the frags,  I am unsure if anyone can distinguish between these family members, Angustidens, Chubutensis, Auriculatus, or Megalodon...

Here is an interesting thread to read...

 

The White Queen  ".... in her youth she could believe "six impossible things before breakfast"

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Thank you. I told him that I thought they were too small to identify but he's just so hopeful that he found a Meg. I didn't think Megs had the big serrations, so I bursted his bubble.  He keeps calling them his meg teeth and I keep calling them his angy teeth. :BigSmile: We will just call them the cool broken teeth now.

Fin Lover

image.png.e69a5608098eeb4cd7d1fc5feb4dad1e.png image.png.e6c66193c1b85b1b775526eb958f72df.png image.png.65903ff624a908a6c80f4d36d6ff8260.png

image.png.7cefa5ccc279142681efa4b7984dc6cb.png

My favorite things about fossil hunting: getting out of my own head, getting into nature and, if I’m lucky, finding some cool souvenirs.

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