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Parotodus Benedeni Teeth


fossilselachian

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Attached are a few pics of Parotodus benedeni teeth from several US locations.

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You beat me to it. I was taking pics of mine when you posted yours. I just completed another set of teeth. Here are the eocene, oligocene and miocene examples of Parotodus. BTW -great pieces you posted - Sharktooth Hill examples are very rare.

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There's no limit to what you can accomplish when you're supposed to be doing something else

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Attached are a few pics of Parotodus benedeni teeth from several US locations.

Wow, those are extremely nice! That Lee Creek anterior is incredible.

Thanks for posting pics.

Here are mine. The teeth in the first pic (all around 2 3/4") are (left to right):

1) Very Rare Chilean benny. I believe this is only one of a handful

ever found down in Chile. Like megs, I guess the Parotodus got big

down there as well, this tooth would be around 3" if the tip weren't

gone.

2) Lee Creek tooth.

3) North Carolina river tooth

The last picture shows three smaller specimens. The one on the left

is from the Netherlands. Not sure of the formation, but I believe it is

Miocene. The other two are Lee Creek teeth.

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:o :o :o :o :o :o

OMG!!!! I don't even have one <_< . STH benedeni's are RARE.

Northern Sharks, I didn't know there were benedeni's in Morocco? Cool B)

Tha tighin fodham, fodham, fodham!

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The Moroccan ones are Parotodus sp. NOT benedeni

There's no limit to what you can accomplish when you're supposed to be doing something else

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The Moroccan ones are Parotodus sp. NOT benedeni

Got it, thanks.

Tha tighin fodham, fodham, fodham!

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Wow, those are extremely nice! That Lee Creek anterior is incredible.

Thanks for posting pics.

Here are mine. The teeth in the first pic (all around 2 3/4") are (left to right):

1) Very Rare Chilean benny. I believe this is only one of a handful

ever found down in Chile. Like megs, I guess the Parotodus got big

down there as well, this tooth would be around 3" if the tip weren't

gone.

2) Lee Creek tooth.

3) North Carolina river tooth

The last picture shows three smaller specimens. The one on the left

is from the Netherlands. Not sure of the formation, but I believe it is

Miocene. The other two are Lee Creek teeth.

Lots of beauties here!!

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Awesome teeth!!!!! :thumbsup: I'm sure y'all know how rare these babies are!!! Diver's are lucky to pluck one or two of these a year, sure that land finds are not any easier to obtain.

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Here are mine. The teeth in the first pic (all around 2 3/4") are (left to right):

1) Very Rare Chilean benny. I believe this is only one of a handful

ever found down in Chile. Like megs, I guess the Parotodus got big

down there as well, this tooth would be around 3" if the tip weren't

gone.

2) Lee Creek tooth.

3) North Carolina river tooth

The last picture shows three smaller specimens. The one on the left

is from the Netherlands. Not sure of the formation, but I believe it is

Miocene. The other two are Lee Creek teeth.

Eddie: That L/C Parotodus is a beauty!! :P

FS

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  • 2 weeks later...

Just throwing in a few of my bennies. These are all from Sharktooth Hill. The largest one is 2.75". The juvenile tooth (top left is about 1.6"). The tooth on the bottom left is an upper lateral, the bottom right is a lower anterior.

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Wow, those are extremely nice! That Lee Creek anterior is incredible.

Thanks for posting pics.

Here are mine. The teeth in the first pic (all around 2 3/4") are (left to right):

1) Very Rare Chilean benny. I believe this is only one of a handful

ever found down in Chile. Like megs, I guess the Parotodus got big

down there as well, this tooth would be around 3" if the tip weren't

gone.

2) Lee Creek tooth.

3) North Carolina river tooth

The last picture shows three smaller specimens. The one on the left

is from the Netherlands. Not sure of the formation, but I believe it is

Miocene. The other two are Lee Creek teeth.

Assuming the specimen from The Netherlands is coming from the Langenboom/Mill locality it should be the "Formatie van Breda" which pretty much covers the Miocene in that part of The Netherlands. More specifically, the fossil bearing layers at Langenboom/Mill seem to be of late Miocene to early Pliocene origin. Local complication is that the teeth-bearing sediments are sucked from the bottom of a small lake, so there is no way of telling their exact origin/age unless you dive down and find one in the walls of the underwater "canyons" in combination with a stratigraphic analysis of the undergound.

Actually, there is a publication on the local stratigraphy coming out right about now, based on samples collected @ discrete intervals by divers.

I could send you the PDF when I get it, if you're interested.

Cheers,

Paul

  • I found this Informative 1

"And the men who hold high places, Must be the ones to start

To mould a new reality, Closer to the Heart"

(Rush, "Closer to the Heart" from the album "A Farewell to Kings")

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Just throwing in a few of my bennies. These are all from Sharktooth Hill. The largest one is 2.75". The juvenile tooth (top left is about 1.6"). The tooth on the bottom left is an upper lateral, the bottom right is a lower anterior.

Isurus90064.

Those are really great STH Parotodus teeth. That is the most Parotodus teeth I've ever seen at one time from this site. It will now be interesting to see what happens to the Ernest property. :P:P

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they are nice i have one parodtodus sp. and a really small benedeni from maryland

Bmorefossil:

Parotodus teeth from Maryland are most uncommon. I'd really like to see a pic of this tooth.

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Assuming the specimen from The Netherlands is coming from the Langenboom/Mill locality it should be the "Formatie van Breda" which pretty much covers the Miocene in that part of The Netherlands. More specifically, the fossil bearing layers at Langenboom/Mill seem to be of late Miocene to early Pliocene origin. Local complication is that the teeth-bearing sediments are sucked from the bottom of a small lake, so there is no way of telling their exact origin/age unless you dive down and find one in the walls of the underwater "canyons" in combination with a stratigraphic analysis of the undergound.

Actually, there is a publication on the local stratigraphy coming out right about now, based on samples collected @ discrete intervals by divers.

I could send you the PDF when I get it, if you're interested.

Cheers,

Paul

Hi Paul,

Thanks very much for the information. I do believe it came from the Langenboom/Mill location. I wouldn't mind

seeing the publicaton when it comes out, that would be interesting. I'll send you a PM with my e-mail address.

Thanks!

Eddie

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Isurus90064.

Those are really great STH Parotodus teeth. That is the most Parotodus teeth I've ever seen at one time from this site. It will now be interesting to see what happens to the Ernest property. :P:P

I used to collect with Bob Ernst when he was still alive and I am currently helping with some of the issues you're referring to. We found some amazing fossils in the past. I remember Bob found 2 lower anterior Hexanchus andersoni once thast were fused together at the ends forming the largest Hexanchus tooth ever (each tooth was about 1.5 inches, the total length was somewhere around 3"). He had also found an associated Cosmopolitodus vert string (72 vert) with a number of teeth with it. Another fantastic fossil was a 5.5" meg with cusps (as in big cusps ala angustidens), a whale shark tooth, and only 2 serrated threshers (ever). Of course then there is all the stuff in the museum!

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I used to collect with Bob Ernst when he was still alive...

Talk about "on the knee of the master"!

"There has been an alarming increase in the number of things I know nothing about." - Ashleigh Ellwood Brilliant

“Try to learn something about everything and everything about something.” - Thomas Henry Huxley

>Paleontology is an evolving science.

>May your wonders never cease!

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