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  2. Fossil hunters find different halves of same ancient shark ...

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    The pieces are now reunited, creating a single 5.5-inch-long, 5.1-inch-wide tooth that came from one of the world’s most fearsome predators — a prehistoric shark that reached nearly 60 feet in ...

  3. Sonar showed a 50-foot shark nearing boat off New England ...

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    Shark researchers are accustomed to surprises, but The Atlantic Shark Institute was taken off guard when something resembling an extinct megalodon shark appeared on sonar. Megalodons were 50 feet ...

  4. Megalodon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megalodon

    Megalodon. Otodus megalodon (/ ˈmɛɡələdɒn / MEG-əl-ə-don; meaning "big tooth"), commonly known as megalodon, is an extinct species of giant mackerel shark that lived approximately 23 to 3.6 million years ago (Mya), from the Early Miocene to the Early Pliocene epochs.

  5. Xampylodon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xampylodon

    Xampylodon is an extinct genus of cow shark.Fossils assigned to this genus are known from the Late Cretaceous and early Paleocene. Xampylodon was recently erected after a revision on the taxonomy of hexanchid fossil teeth, and includes four species (X. dentatus, X. loozi,X. brotzeni, and X. diastemacron), most of them previously included in Notidanodon.

  6. Huge ancient megalodon shark ‘ate sperm whales ... - AOL

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    The ancient shark, which grew up to 65ft long and weighed over 50 tons, ate sperm whales by ripping off their heads with its huge teeth, a new study has shown.

  7. Cretoxyrhina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cretoxyrhina

    Cretoxyrhina. Cretoxyrhina (/ krɪˌtɒksiˈrhaɪnə /; meaning 'Cretaceous sharp-nose') is an extinct genus of large mackerel shark that lived about 107 to 73 million years ago during the late Albian to late Campanian of the Late Cretaceous. The type species, C. mantelli, is more commonly referred to as the Ginsu shark, first popularized in ...

  8. 'Prehistoric' relative of sharks struggle to make a comeback ...

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    A sawfish, a type of ray related to sharks, is immediately recognizable by its snout, also called a rostrum or saw. Often dubbed "prehistoric," scientists studying fossils say sawfish evolved from ...

  9. Cosmopolitodus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmopolitodus

    Isurus planus (Jordan, 1907) Cosmopolitodus is an extinct genus of mackerel shark that lived between thirty and one million years ago during the late Oligocene to the Early Pleistocene epochs. Its type species is Cosmopolitodus hastalis, the broad-tooth mako (other common names include the extinct giant mako and broad-tooth white shark).