yes
The only Carcharodon megalodon fossils that have been found are teeth. They lived between 28 and 2 million years ago. They have been discovered all over the world, which is known as a cosmopolitan distribution.
The oldest fossilized shark remains that have been found are teeth, identified as the megalodon.
A megalodon would have been between 16 and 20 metres long.
The geographic range of the megalodon, an extinct species of shark, was global, spanning oceans worldwide. Fossils of megalodon have been found in North and South America, Europe, Africa, Asia, and Australia, indicating a wide distribution during its existence.
Megalodon sharks are only known from fossilized teeth. Even before the Renaissance, megalodon teeth had been found, but they were believed to be the petrified tongues of dragons or snakes. In 1667, Danish naturalist Nicolaus Steno recognized that they were shark teeth. He revealed his findings in a book called The Head of a Shark Dissected.
Megalodon sharks are only known from fossilized teeth. Even before the Renaissance, megalodon teeth had been found, but they were believed to be the petrified tongues of dragons or snakes. In 1667, Danish naturalist Nicolaus Steno, recognized that they were shark teeth. He revealed his findings in a book called The Head of a Shark Dissected.
Although there were sharks in the Mesozoic Era, Carcharodon megalodon was not one of them. C. megalodon lived during the Neogene Period, 40 million years after the dinosaurs went extinct.
The megalodon was extinct 18 to 1.5 million years ago and it lives in all the oceans apart from the Arctic and the Antarctic. fossils are found worldwide.
Yes it is because it has been the biggest predator shark that has been ever seen!
50-60 feet
no, it is the top predator of its time, so it has no enemies or competators