FOSSIL TEETH OF SAND TIGER SHARK IN GLASS DISPLAY BOX - 55 million years old - Herne Bay, Kent
« backFOSSIL TEETH OF SAND TIGER SHARK
Paleohypotodus rutoti
Herne Bay, Kent
55 million years old
Two beautifully preserved fossilised sharks teeth in a plastic display box with a glass lid.
A shark has jaws packed with a frightening array of teeth. The teeth are only loosely attached to the jaw and often fall out to be preserved in the mud on the sea floor.
These fossils were collected in the 1980s from rocks exposed on the foreshore at Herne Bay on the north coast of Kent.
Two beautifully preserved fossilised sharks teeth in a plastic display box with a glass lid.
A shark has jaws packed with a frightening array of teeth. The teeth are only loosely attached to the jaw and often fall out to be preserved in the mud on the sea floor.
These fossils were collected in the 1980s from rocks exposed on the foreshore at Herne Bay on the north coast of Kent.
Click on a picture for a larger image
Size: 6 x 6 x 2 centimetres (size of box)
Weight: 34 grams (weight of box)