It only eats plants.
well no one now's as there not real but i would think sharp
because it attarcks them and they think it is food and then it comes to you
i would think a goats teeth would be sharp and sheeps teeth would be not as sharp but im just guessing i think sheep eat grass but then again i dont know much about sheep and goats
I think because they are wild animals
they are sharp, jagged, and are in maltiple rows (of 5 i think)
No it doesnt the the teeth they found was over 10.000.000 years old
yes, but not the same kind as you are used to. Sharks (or dogfish) have cartilagenous skeletons rather than skeletons of bone.
The canines. These are the sharp, pointy teeth that are usually somewhat elongated on either side of your incisors. Think 'vampire'.
Omnivores typically have a combination of sharp teeth for tearing meat and flat teeth for grinding plants. Carnivores have sharp teeth for slicing meat, while herbivores have flat teeth for grinding plants. Omnivores' teeth structure allows them to consume a varied diet of both meat and plants.
I think very small
well, between the claws and the razor sharp teeth, i think their power over other animals is how they protect them.
They may conclude that the animal was a herbivore as flat teeth are used for grinding up vegetation, as opposed to sharp teeth (incisors) which are good at cutting / chewing / biting meat.