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- Shark Vert Vs Fish Vert - Questions Answers - The Fossil Forum
Shark vertebrae tend to be preserved as just the centrum (the hockey puck-like disk) with two openings on top and two on the bottom where the hemal and neural arches were attached The arches were cartilaginous in life and disintegrate quickly after death The centrum sometimes survives as a fossil because it is at least partially ossified Because they aren't solid bone, they are fragile
- Shark Tooth From Montana - General Fossil Discussion - The Fossil Forum
Can anyone please advise as to whether its possible to find shark tooth fossils in Montana? And maybe give me details as to the location and or class of tooth?
- Fossil Shark Teeth from Ohio Archaeological Sites
Fossil Shark Teeth from Ohio Archaeological Sites adena carcharodon hopewell megalodon ohio pickaway county shark teeth shark tooth wayne county westenhaver mound woodland
- Summerville, SC Shark Teeth Hunt: Advice - The Fossil Forum
If you are planning to go to Summerville, SC for your first time, and have been hoping to find Shark Teeth, please read this My Advice: · I advise only going if you know someone with known locations, or otherwise plan to hire a company or a guide (I do not have someone to recommend) Finding tee
- Blue Hill Shale - Fossil Hunting Trips - The Fossil Forum
Hey everyone Just wanted to share last weekends outing Kind of funny, but in the course of two weeks I went from have never found a shark tooth to finding a dozen and now possibly hundreds I went to another place in the Blue Hill Shale in Osborne county Kansas on an unexpected day trip with my
- Michigan Shark Teeth - Fossil Hunting Trips - The Fossil Forum
I don't know Michigan was high and dry from the Mesozoic and later, the ages for these types of teeth (except for the great lakes which are fresh water) These look like shark teeth that are found in coastal areas,Tx, La, Fla, the Carolinas and California
- Midlothian Quarry Shark Teeth and More! - The Fossil Forum
Midlothian Quarry Shark Teeth and More! cretaceous midlothian texas By JamieLynn September 25, 2019 in Fossil Hunting Trips
- Scyliorhinoid Shark Vertebra - Fossil ID - The Fossil Forum
The research paper on extant shark centra "A Guide to Identifying Shark Centra from Southeastern Archaeological Sites" Kozuch and Fitzgerald 1989 is an easy and good read on the issues in connecting fossil shark vertebra with a specific species of shark
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