Shark teeth and bones

Welcome to our Antique Bottle community

Be a part of something great, join today!

truedigr

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 12, 2010
Messages
367
Reaction score
0
Points
16
Lastly, these are some shark verts. Figured since we have arrowheads on here, why not put some fossils. Robert
 

Plumbata

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 4, 2007
Messages
2,732
Reaction score
47
Points
48
Location
Peoria Co.
Very nice fossils, thanks for sharing!

So does this material come from different locations? Those shark teeth look more like Eocene or Miocene material to me but I'm no expert. There was a Cretaceous locality in Bowie, MD that produced some good teeth and bones but I didn't find anything definitively from dinosaurs, unless you count alligator/crocodile teeth.

Those dino fossils are awesome, with the Mosasaur teeth and jaw fragment being particularly interesting. Please keep us updated on your future fossil finds!

A while back I found a 300 million year old Agassizodus Corrugatus tooth in shale matrix in Illinois. Found a few thousand Miocene teeth in MD but the Permian piece was certainly more interesting and rare.

Thanks again, and lets see some more!
 

Members online

Latest threads

Forum statistics

Threads
83,391
Messages
744,058
Members
24,427
Latest member
Bobbinc4
Top