Global Times

Rare teeth from ancient shark found on Australia beach

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A rare set of teeth from a giant prehistori­c mega-shark twice the size of the great white have been found on an Australian beach by a keen-eyed amateur enthusiast, scientists said Thursday.

Philip Mullaly was strolling along an area known as a fossil hotspot at Jan Juc, on the country’s famous Great Ocean Road some 100 kilometers from Melbourne, when he made the find.

“I was walking along the beach looking for fossils, turned and saw this shining glint in a boulder and saw a quarter of the tooth exposed,” he said.

“I was immediatel­y excited, it was just perfect and I knew it was an important find that needed to be shared with people.”

He told Museums Victoria, and Erich Fitzgerald, senior curator of vertebrate palaeontol­ogy, confirmed the seven centimeter-long teeth were from an extinct species of predator known as the great jagged narrow-toothed shark (Carcharocl­es angustiden­s).

The shark, which stalked Australia’s oceans around 25 million years ago, feasting on small whales and penguins, could grow more than nine meters long, twice the length of today’s great white shark.

“These teeth are of internatio­nal significan­ce, as they represent one of just three associated groupings of Carcharocl­es angustiden­s teeth in the world, and the very first set to ever be discovered in Australia,” Fitzgerald said.

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