Shark Teeth: Grading & Localities
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Shark Teeth: Grading & Localities
How collectors evaluate condition, what drives desirability, and where the most storied teeth come from đđŚ
Creative nicknames you can use in catalogs: TideâBlack TriâRidge ⢠Moonwake JetâCrown ⢠HarborâAsh Cutlass ⢠Pungo BronzeâEdge ⢠Calvert SlateâSerrate ⢠RoundâMountain HoneyâTip ⢠PeaceâRiver EmberâRoot ⢠Zandmotor SteelâBlade ⢠Sheppey ClayâChocolate ⢠Khouribga Caramel Fang
đĄ What This Covers
âGreat tooth! But how great?â Grading brings structure to that gut feeling. Below youâll find a transparent collectorâs rubric you can use in product pages and labels, plus a tour of famous localities and the look each tends to produce. Weâll keep the science crisp and the tone friendly â like a museum label that had a good cappuccino.
đ§Ž The Grading Rubric â Score What You Can See
Use this rubric to score a tooth out of 100. Itâs speciesâagnostic and focuses on observable condition. (We add desirability factors later.)
| Category | Weight | What âExcellentâ Looks Like | Deductions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tip integrity | 15 | Sharp, original apex; no rounding or rebuild | Microâchips (â2), rounding (â5), missing/rebuilt (â8 to â15) |
| Serrations / cutting edge | 15 | Full, crisp, even from shoulder to apex | Minor wear (â3), patchy loss (â6), heavy roll (â10+) |
| Crown enamel | 12 | Glossy, no peel, no flake; natural sheen | Flake (â3), peel (â6), aggressive polish (â4), cracks (â1 to â5) |
| Bourlette (if present) | 8 | Distinct, complete, evenly colored | Partial (â3), faint (â2), missing (â6) |
| Root completeness | 12 | Both lobes intact, natural texture, nutrient groove clean | Lobe chip (â2), lobe loss (â5), reattached/composite (â8) |
| Symmetry & position match | 8 | Even shoulders; appropriate curvature for position (e.g., UA vs. UL) | Offâcenter crown (â2), twist/misalignment (â3) |
| Surface patina | 8 | Attractive, natural sheen (river polish or matte as expected) | Sandâblast wear (â2), fresh scratches (â2), glossy oil (â3) |
| Color quality | 6 | Even, saturated for locality; desirable contrast crown/root | Blotchy (â2), dye lines (â4), sunâfade streaking (â2) |
| Stability | 6 | Solid, no friable areas, clean edges | Friable root (â3), active flaking (â4) |
| Repairs / alterations | 8 | None; if present, professionally disclosed & reversible | Hidden composite (â8), overâpolish (â4), paint (â5) |
đˇď¸ Grade Thresholds â Turning Scores into Labels
| Grade | Score | Short Description |
|---|---|---|
| Exhibit / Museum | 90â100 | Exceptional integrity; crisp edges, complete root, desirable natural patina; any repair is minimal and fully disclosed. |
| Collector A | 80â89 | Strong overall with minor honest wear; great display impact. |
| Collector B | 70â79 | Good crown and root with noticeable but acceptable flaws (e.g., light serration roll or small root chip). |
| Study / Education | 55â69 | Solid reference piece; great for handling trays and teaching morphology. |
| Field / Fragment | <55 | Pathâworn or incomplete; still valuable for comparative sets or jewelry projects. |
Species & locality desirability can shift a price within a grade â a 60âmm Exhibitâgrade âeverydayâ species wonât match a 60âmm Exhibitâgrade rarity.
𩹠Flaws, Repairs & Red Flags
Honest Wear
- Surf/river rounding of apex
- Light serration roll from feeding/use
- Root edge ânibblesâ from tumbling
Common Repairs
- Reattached root or lobe
- Tip rebuild/sculpt
- Crack fill and overâpolish to blend
Red Flags
- Uniform paint on crown to fake gloss
- Glue lines fluorescing brightly under UV
- Composite: crown and root from different teeth
- Resin casts: too light; mold seam; plastic smell on a warm needle (donât test on valued pieces)
đ Authenticity Checks â Five Quick Habits
- Loupe the edges: Real serrations are microâasymmetric and show tiny chips; cast serrations look factoryâeven.
- Weight & feel: Phosphate feels dense and cool; resin feels warm and light for size.
- Texture contrast: Vitreous crown vs. matte/porous root â tooâuniform sheen suggests coat or polish.
- UV scan: Many glues fluoresce; enamel usually stays quiet or glows weakly/patchy.
- Provenance notes: A known layer/locality plus a consistent look boosts confidence.
Rule of thumb: unsure? Seek a second opinion before a big purchase â teeth donât have return policies in the wild.
đ Size, Indexing & Rarity
Size matters, but relative size matters more. A 40âŻmm tooth may be average for one species and a monster for another. For consistency:
Measurements to record
- CH (Crown Height): apex to crownâroot junction
- BW (Basal Width): straight across root lobes
- SC (Serration Count): number per side for 10âŻmm
- Weight: helpful for big crowns
Handy index
RCHI = (CH á BW) Ă 100 â a quick shape ratio. Broad triangles sit lower; spearâforms higher. Include this in listings for easy comparison.
Size classes (generic)
Micro <10âŻmm ⢠Small 10â25âŻmm ⢠Medium 25â50âŻmm ⢠Large 50â75âŻmm ⢠Giant >75âŻmm â adjust expectations by species/locality.
đ Localities at a Glance â What Look to Expect
Localities imprint teeth with signature colors and patinas. Ages below are approximate and meant for labels. Always follow local laws and landowner rules; some sites allow surface collecting, others require permits or are closed.
| Locality | Geologic Unit / Age | Hallmark Look | Nickname Ideas |
|---|---|---|---|
| Calvert Cliffs, Maryland (USA) | Chesapeake Group â Miocene | Slate to gunmetal crowns; excellent preservation in cliff fall material | âCalvert SlateâSerrateâ ⢠âBayâMist TriâEdgeâ |
| Aurora / Lee Creek, North Carolina (USA) | Yorktown & Pungo River â PlioceneâMiocene | Caramel to blueâgray tones; broad selection of species | âPungo BronzeâEdgeâ ⢠âYorktown SteelâCrownâ |
| South Carolina Rivers (USA) | Reworked MioceneâPliocene gravels | Blackwater jet, silky river polish; large crowns frequent | âBlackwater JetâRidgeâ ⢠âCooper EmberâRootâ |
| Peace River, Florida (USA) | Pleistocene gravels (with older rework) | Deep browns and blacks; rounded edges from transport | âPeaceâRiver Emberâ ⢠âManatee CoffeeâCrownâ |
| Venice Beach, Florida (USA) | Nearshore lag â mixed ages | Stormâtossed variety; small to medium teeth in sandy grays | âVenice StormâPickâ ⢠âGulfâSand Spearâ |
| Sharktooth Hill, California (USA) | Round Mountain Silt â Middle Miocene | Honey to toffee enamel; classic makos and megatooth lineage fragments | âRoundâMountain HoneyâTipâ ⢠âTemblor ToffeeâEdgeâ |
| Big Brook, New Jersey (USA) | Late Cretaceous marls | Pastel tans/greys; elegant small lamniform and crowâshark teeth | âMarlâMist MicroâCrownâ ⢠âBrookâPastel Hookâ |
| Oulad Abdoun / Khouribga (Morocco) | Phosphates â PaleoceneâEocene | Warm caramel/butterscotch enamel; classic multiâcusped forms | âKhouribga Caramel Fangâ ⢠âAtlas AmberâEdgeâ |
| BahĂa Inglesa, Chile | MioceneâPliocene coastal beds | Steelâgray palette; robust preservation, diverse fauna | âInglesa SteelâBladeâ ⢠âHumboldt SlateâSerrateâ |
| Pisco Basin, Peru | Miocene marine sediments | Tan to soot crowns; occasional exceptional macroâspecimens | âPisco DesertâEdgeâ ⢠âParacas SableâTipâ |
| Zandmotor / Maasvlakte (Netherlands) | Dredged PleistoceneâHolocene sands | Iceâgray to smoke; frequent smalls with crisp detail | âNorthâSea SteelâPointâ ⢠âZandmotor IceâEdgeâ |
| Antwerp Area (Belgium) | MioceneâPliocene sands | Cool gray crowns; elegant mako and requiem teeth | âScheldt GrayâSpearâ ⢠âAntwerp SlateâCrownâ |
| Isle of Sheppey, UK | London Clay â Eocene | Chocolate browns; clayâfresh sheen when newly weathered | âSheppey ClayâChocolateâ ⢠âThamesâMist Tipâ |
| Beaumaris, Victoria (Australia) | Pliocene marine beds | Ivory creams to soft grays; handsome makos and whites | âBeaumaris IvoryâRidgeâ ⢠âBassâStrait PaleâEdgeâ |
Local access varies and can change; check regulations and respect private property and protected sites.
đŚ Locality Spotlights â Texture, Tone & Story
Calvert Cliffs (USA)
Miocene sea life weathering out of sculpted clay bluffs. Expect slateâgray crowns with honest edge wear, often beautifully symmetric. After storms, the beach turns into a natural museum conveyor belt.
Sharktooth Hill (USA)
Round Mountain Silt concentrates teeth in layers that feel like time capsules. Honey to toffee enamel is common; even modest pieces glow in warm light.
South Carolina Rivers (USA)
Blackwater gravels rework older marine beds: deep jet patina, silky river polish, and an impressive size range. Visibility varies with rain and tide â patience rewarded!
Moroccan Phosphates
Classic multiâcusped Eocene forms in caramel palettes. Preparation ranges from rough to refined; top examples balance warm tone with crisp detail.
đď¸ Provenance & Labeling â Make Science Travel with the Tooth
Label Essentials
- Locality (nearest town/feature)
- Formation & approximate age (e.g., âMiocene, ~15âŻMaâ)
- Tentative genus/species (with âcf.â or â?â if unsure)
- Measurements (CH, BW, weight)
- Notes: bourlette, serrations, repairs disclosed
Provenance Perks
Named localities and documented finds often carry a collector premium. A neat handwritten label turns an object into a story. Bonus points for GPS (where legal and appropriate) and stratigraphic notes.
⨠Rhymed Charms (for fun & focus)
Graderâs Clarity
Before scoring a special tooth, breathe slowly, then say:
âLight be kind and loupe be clear,
Show the truth thatâs resting here.
Edge and root and crown agree â
Let my notes match what I see.â
Map & Memory
When placing labels in a display case:
âCliff and river, dune and bay,
Mark the layers, note the day.
Tooth and tale, together stay â
So the sea wonât wash away.â
These verses are for ambiance and mindfulness â not a substitute for careful grading or tide charts. đ
â FAQ
Does polishing hurt value?
Light handâpolish on the crown ridge can highlight luster; aggressive polishing that blurs serrations or coats the root usually lowers grade and desirability. When in doubt, leave as found.
Whatâs the âbourletteâ and why do collectors care?
Itâs a matte band beneath the crown seen in megatooth lineage and some kin. A wellâpreserved bourlette adds contrast and helps with identification â many top examples highlight it in photos.
How important is locality for grading?
Condition determines the grade; locality refines value and story. Two Aâgrade teeth can differ in price due to classic provenance or rarity of species at that site.
Are dyed or coated teeth common?
They occur. Watch for uniform neon hues, dye pooling in root pores, and glossy clear coats. We avoid altered pieces unless clearly labeled as such for craft use.
Can I collect at these localities?
Rules change by location. Some beaches and rivers allow casual collecting; others are protected or private. Always check current regulations, respect closures, and seek permission.
đ The Takeaway
Grading turns admiration into clear language: tip, edge, enamel, root, patina, and disclosure. Localities add texture â slate Calvert, honey Temblor, jet river gravels, caramel phosphates â so each tooth carries not just a bite but a place. Use the rubric for consistency, celebrate provenance, and label generously. Your trays will read like a travelogue you can hold.
Lighthearted wink: remember, the best grade is the one that makes you grin. Just donât test the serrations with that grin. đ