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Show Us Your Pathological Shark Teeth


sixgill pete

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On 9/12/2018 at 1:23 AM, ynot said:

Here is My latest contribution to this thread....

It is likely a Carcharhinus sp. tooth.

Scale in millimeters.

 

Most unusual! :)

Life's Good!

Tortoise Friend.

MOTM.png.61350469b02f439fd4d5d77c2c69da85.png.a47e14d65deb3f8b242019b3a81d8160-1.png.60b8b8c07f6fa194511f8b7cfb7cc190.png

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  • 8 months later...

Picked this guy up yesterday from Bakersfield, California.

An Isurus planus with an unusual feature. Something I have never run across with all the teeth I have gotten there 

If it weren't for the root, you wouldn't be able to tell the labial side from the lingual side. It is hard to get on camera, but they are both convex and identical in shape.

 

lingual side

20190609_203703.jpg

 

labial side

20190609_203719.jpg

 

20190609_203643.jpg

 

Here is the normal look of the labial side. Concave with contours.

20190609_203604.jpg

 

20190609_210844.jpg

  • I found this Informative 1

 

 

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  • 3 years later...

Here's my pathological Great White I found in the Savanah River!

20220406_214608.jpg

20220406_214616.jpg

"Life is too complex for me to wrap my mind around, that's why I have fossils and not pets!":tff:

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