This Specimen has been sold.
Huge Fossil Mako Tooth - Dakhla, Morocco
This is a huge and beautifully colored fossil Mako shark tooth (Isurus) from new Dakhla, Morocco. At over 2 1/2 inches it is near maximum size for a fossil mako tooth. One corner of the root is damaged but the blade is gorgeous. Complete teeth are rare finds from this site.
This shark, whose teeth can be found in deposits worldwide, lived from the Eocene to the Pleistocene. It had been historically classified as a broad-toothed mako shark (Isurus hastalis). It was then reclassified as Cosmopolitodus hastalis, making it a type of extinct mackerel shark.
More recent research has reclassified it as part of the white shark lineage, which would rename the species to Carcharodon hastalis. You can read more about this here. What classification is correct is still under debate, leading to lots of different labels for these teeth. We prefer the most recent interpretation and label them as Carcharodon hastalis.
Teeth of this shark have been found up to 3 1/2 inches in length but teeth over 2 1/2 inches are uncommon and very rare over 3 inches.
More recent research has reclassified it as part of the white shark lineage, which would rename the species to Carcharodon hastalis. You can read more about this here. What classification is correct is still under debate, leading to lots of different labels for these teeth. We prefer the most recent interpretation and label them as Carcharodon hastalis.
Teeth of this shark have been found up to 3 1/2 inches in length but teeth over 2 1/2 inches are uncommon and very rare over 3 inches.
SPECIES
Carcharodon (Isurus) hastalis
AGE
LOCATION
Dakhla, Morocco
SIZE
2.57" long
CATEGORY
SUB CATEGORY
ITEM
#4150
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