-
Bryan Hart posted a new activity comment 7 months, 3 weeks ago
7 months, 3 weeks ago7 months, 3 weeks agoIt was found in Ontario canada
-
Bryan Hart posted a new activity comment 7 months, 3 weeks ago
7 months, 3 weeks ago7 months, 3 weeks agoI’m as found in Ontario definitely not a shark tooth or coral
-
Bryan Hart posted an image in the group Education and Outreach from the myFOSSIL app 7 months, 3 weeks ago
7 months, 3 weeks ago7 months, 3 weeks agoAny ideas on what animal this tooth is from #fossil
-
Bryan Hart joined the group Mongolian Dinos Educators 7 months, 3 weeks ago
7 months, 3 weeks ago7 months, 3 weeks ago -
Bryan Hart joined the group Education and Outreach 7 months, 3 weeks ago
7 months, 3 weeks ago7 months, 3 weeks ago -
Bryan Hart joined the group Astonishing Arthropods 7 months, 3 weeks ago
7 months, 3 weeks ago7 months, 3 weeks ago -
Bryan Hart joined the group Alf Museum 7 months, 3 weeks ago
7 months, 3 weeks ago7 months, 3 weeks ago
It is not a tooth. This is a rugosa,or horn coral
Sorry this looks like a well eroded sharktooth. Depending on the size you may have found a megalodon tooth. Congratulations
I’m as found in Ontario definitely not a shark tooth or coral
It was found in Ontario canada
Had another look. Megalodon was present during Neogene period. From the maps I checked Lake Ontario seems to have been larger during earlier epochs as shown by shell and coral fossils. Megalodon did not necessarily swim there. The tooth could perhaps have been deposited between ice ages or could it have been carried in by humans? I would…[Read more]