Opal tooth found in clay and opal mountain! Seems to be diatomaceous earth and clay!not pre Palio just Palio edited

Will do. Thanks I don’t usually use forums so if I’m too much at any time just tell me to take a break ok.

also this forum is for all treasure rite not just dug or prospected .
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You're not too much. You're perfectly fine there are misunderstanding and we all have bad days. It is for all treasure lots of different threads to post different things. I hope you feel welcomed as I said before lots of great people here
 

Will do. Thanks I don’t usually use forums so if I’m too much at any time just tell me to take a break ok.

also this forum is for all treasure rite not just dug or prospected .
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Sometime when you,ve got time,scroll down the forums list and look at all the topics covered.Just about any facet of treasure hunting has it,s forum with good knowlegeble folks who don,t mind sharing. Just one thing,it,s not facebook,leave those kind of manners there! You,ll pick it up!
 

Still hoping some shark specialist would be able to clear up what this is. Sharpness can be carnivorous. Or not a tooth at all snail? Unknown still but it’s from a clay DE layer that’s washing off top of a opal mountain . my guess is it’s aquatic type and had big teeth. And bones the size of a chain link fence post.
Welcome. I'm sorry to tell you it is not a shark tooth. When you find a fossil shark tooth, there is no doubt. Your common opal specimen just happened to form in a pointed shape. Notice how the edges fade out with no defined break between it and the mother rock.

Here are a few I collected in 2017 as examples. Something you don't see every day, are the whale ear bones. Lower left, lower right.

IMG_3498.JPG
 

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Last last picture certainly looks like a common tooth surface to me. I think you may have a megafauna tooth candidate there
 

I have literally found tens of thousands of fossil sharks teeth and what you posted bears no resemblance to a shark tooth.
Now take my opinion with a grain of salt, there are other members on here that are more academically trained on the matter and hold some prestigious positions within the fossil community so maybe one will chime in.
 

Welcome. I'm sorry to tell you it is not a shark tooth. When you find a fossil shark tooth, there is no doubt. Your common opal specimen just happened to form in a pointed shape. Notice how the edges fade out with no defined break between it and the mother rock.

Here are a few I collected in 2017 as examples. Something you don't see every day, are the whale ear bones. Lower left, lower right.

View attachment 2038758
Kray, these look like Summerville teeth. I sure do miss some of the sites I have collected there over the years.
 

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