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Shark tooth ID help!


Sarahnm

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Hi there! I am super new to fossils and have been wanting to learn more. Today I found my first ever shark tooth by total accident on the San Lorenzo River in Felton, CA. I was wondering if anyone could help me identify the tooth! One of my students also found a thinner one in the same area yesterday- pretty wild!- and I was wondering if they were both the same species. My best super uneducated guess is some kind of mako shark but really have no idea!
 

some extra details: both of them were sitting on the shore of the river in plain sight- I don’t have a measurement of them right now but can get one eventually! Thank you:) 

13CC09D1-C37C-4B3C-AAE7-E4F3683472E4.jpeg

2D1640ED-FC79-4332-B2B0-736882D54116.jpeg

F61E3BA9-76A9-4CF8-B676-5AD7858E35DB.jpeg

E5BB32B5-DC34-41E7-9273-6FF1510F71D8.jpeg

Edited by Sarahnm
Adding more photos/details
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An identification key to elasmobranch species based on dental morphological
characters. Part B: extant Lamniform sharks (Superorder Galeomorphii: Order
Lamniformes).

Jürgen Pollerspöck & Nicolas Straube

bulletin of fish biology,v.19 1--06-2020

Pollerspöck-Straube-2019-An-identification-key-to-elasmobranch-genera-Bull-Fish-Biol-18-S.-77-105.pdf

 

 

 

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Good chance that both are Carcharodon hastalis, but they might be too worn to know for certain.

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