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Dino Bo Shark Tooth Hunt Bag
Find your own North Texas shark teeth - a fun and unique family activity!
Fossils
guaranteed in
every bag for just $20!
Limited availability at public Dino Bo appearances.
Contact me for a quote with shipping.
Tips, Tricks, and Identification Guide
Fish Fossils
Fish vertebrae are small and resemble tiny beads or frisbees. They have a disc like shape. Fish teeth can also be found mixed in, they look similar to shark teeth but typically have a circular base like an ice cream cone.
Ray Teeth
These super tiny fossils are teeth from rays. They are incedibly small but are abundant. Most of you will have at least one in your bag, if not more. They resemble a short and wide pyramid in shape.
Scapanorynchus
The goblin shark, this is one of, if not the most, abundant type of tooth found in the bags. The blades are long and skinny.
Cretalamna
These are really cool teeth, Cretalamna is a really early ancestor to what later on became Megalodon.
Cretodus
Cretodus was one of the apex predators of the area. While large teeth like this are incredibly rare, they can be found occasionally.
Squalicorax
The Crow shark as it is sometimes refered to as, because of it’s apparent habit as a scavenger. These very triangular teeth are easy to identify, they’re the only shark tooth found in the bag that will have serrations on the blade.
Ptychodus whipplei
While many Ptychodus species exist, nearly all in the bag will be whipplei. It has a super tall rounded top. These teeth resemble the top of a baby bottle.
Bone fragments
If you’re really lucky, you can find a piece of bone. While small and rare (because they were just beginning to show up), mosasaur vertebrae (like these) can be found.