The teeth of the world's largest prehistoric shark living 2.5 million years ago are discovered

Thirteen shark teeth have been discovered by divers in an underwater hole in central Mexico, supporting the theories of anthropologists that the city of Madera was once underwater. The Mexican state capital of Yucatán has a rich legacy of the ancient Maya people and a current population of 777.615, however, thanks to the discovery of divers [...]
The Mexican state capital of Yucatán has a rich legacy of the ancient Maya people and a current population of 777.615, however, thanks to the discovery of 2.5 million-year-old shark tooth divers, the theory that may have once been underwater now has substantial evidence, Kosovo Press broadcast.

Fifteen dental fossils were found in total with thirteen believed to belong to three different species of sharks, including one megalodon that existed over 2.5 million years ago.

Among the fossils were fossilized vertebras that could be associated with an extinct animal and fossilized human bones, all embedded in the walls of a natural underwater hole.

The fossils belonged to the Pleiocene era, the geology era extending from 5 million to 2.5 million years ago, and Miocene, an early geological era that spans between 23 million and 5 million years ago.

Megalodon, meaning great tooth, lived between 15.9 million and 2.6 million years ago.

It is considered to be one of the largest and most powerful predators in real history, and fossil remains suggest it was 60 feet [18 m] long.

It is thought that the monster looked like a softer version of today's scary white shark and weighed up to 100 tons.

Megalodon is known to fossilized blood cells and teeth, which are triangles and 20 inches [20 cm] diagonal length.

The ancient shark could swim at great speed and kill a wide variety of prey, such as turtles and whales.















