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  2. Diver Discovers Giant Prehistoric Shark Tooth off Coast of ...

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  3. Fossil-hunting diver says he has found a large section of ...

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    At first, fossil-hunting diver Alex Lundberg thought the lengthy object on the sea floor off Florida's Gulf Coast was a piece of wood. It turned out to be something far rarer, Lundberg said: a ...

  4. List of the prehistoric life of Florida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_the_prehistoric...

    Diagram illustrating the largest (grey) and most conservative (red) size estimates of the Miocene-Pliocene shark Carcharocles megalodon (sometimes Carcharodon or Otodus megalodon) with a whale shark (violet), great white shark (green), and anachronistic human (black) to scale †Otodus megalodon

  5. Shelton, who has hunted sharks teeth and fossils for over thirty years frequently provides educational talks about the hobby at local museums runs the Myrtle Beach Shark Teeth Facebook page. Jan ...

  6. Paleontology in Florida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleontology_in_Florida

    Paleontology in Florida refers to paleontological research occurring within or conducted by people from the U.S. state of Florida. Florida has a very rich fossil record spanning from the Eocene to recent times. Florida fossils are often very well preserved. [1] The oldest known fossils in Florida date back to the Eocene.

  7. Shark tooth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shark_tooth

    Any fossils, including fossil shark teeth, are preserved in sedimentary rocks after falling from their mouth. [13] The sediment that the teeth were found in is used to help determine the age of the shark tooth due to the fossilization process. [15] Shark teeth are most commonly found between the Upper Cretaceous and Tertiary periods. [16]

  8. Cutler Fossil Site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cutler_Fossil_Site

    The Cutler Fossil Site is located in a sinkhole on the Miami Rock Ridge, a karstitic limestone formation running near the coast in Miami-Dade County. The ridge at the site is approximately 5 metres (16 ft) above the current sea level, and less than a kilometer from Biscayne Bay.

  9. ‘Shark graveyard’ — with 750 fossilized teeth — lurks under ...

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    Researchers found fossilized teeth belonging to “the immediate ancestor of the giant megalodon shark,” Moore said. “This shark evolved into the megalodon, which was the largest of all sharks ...

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