The length of a shark's teeth depends on the type of shark. The largest living shark, a whale shark, has teeth that are relatively small, even tiny. The smallest living shark, the dogfish, also has tiny teeth, while the great white shark has teeth the size of about 36 mm, or 1.43 in. But the largest shark to have ever lived, the megalodon, could grow teeth longer than seven inches long.
tiger sharks teeth are about 3inches long
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how sharp is the hammerhaed sharks teeth
A whale shark uses it's mouth and teeth to catch food. You can also consider that they use their fins and tails to swim to get to their prey.
Sharks' teeth are attached to their gums, similar to how human teeth are attached. Sharks continuously shed and replace their teeth throughout their lifetime.
"teeth" is plural "is" is singular ...so your sentence is broken. Furthermore, you probably need an apostrophe after the "k" in "sharks" or the sentence doesn't make any sense at all.
yes white sharks have cutting edges and blue sharks have curved teeth
Sharks have 5 or more rows of teeth. Humans only have 20 baby teeth and 32 adult teeth. Sharks can re-grow teeth. Humans only get 2 sets (milk teeth and permanent teeth). Sharks have serrated edges on their teeth. Shark teeth are not attached to the jaw. Humans bite and chew with their teeth. Sharks use their teeth to rip their prey apart.
ALL SHARKS HAVE WHITE TEETH, WHEN THE TEETH FALL OUT AND GET OLDER THEY TURN BLACK
Yes, sharks' teeth are breakable just like us humans.
Great White shark teeth as are those from all sharks are white. Black shark teeth are fossilized ones. The most common color for fossilized shark teeth is a black root with a grayish crown.