No, a helicoprion is an extinct fish.
It is not known specifically why the Helicoprion because extinct. It is thought that they became extinct in the Triassic period.
anything it wanted to........ basicly all of the marine animals.
t-rex is definatly not it, it isCretaceous or the Helicoprion
Helicoprion ("Spiral Saw") was a long-liced genus of shark-like cartilaginous fish that fist arose in the oceans of the late Caboniferous 280 million years ago, survied the Permian-Triassic Extiction Event, and eventually went extinct during the early Triassic some 225 million years ago. The only known fossils are the teeth, which were arranged in a fantastic "tooth-whorl" strongly reminiscent of a circular saw. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helicoprion
all of the oceans
The helicoprion was a prehistoric shark-like fish that lived during the early Permian period, approximately 290 million years ago. As a carnivorous predator, it likely occupied a mid-level position in the food chain, preying on smaller marine animals such as fish and cephalopods. Its unique tooth whorl, resembling a circular saw, suggests it had an effective method for capturing and slicing through its prey. In turn, it may have faced threats from larger marine predators of its time.
Yes They Were Real But Their now Extinct they lasted for a few Million Years.
Helicoprion was a prehistoric fish that lived around 270 million years ago. It had a unique spiral-tooth structure called a "tooth whorl" that formed a circular saw-like blade in its mouth, which it used to slice through prey. Helicoprion likely fed on soft-bodied animals such as squid and other fish.
Yes they are real. They were first on earth 280 million years ago and then went extinct 225 million years ago.
Tiger Shark Lemon Shark Great White Shark Whale Shark Basking Shark Megamouth Shark Grey Reef Shark Carribbean Reef Shark Black Tip Reef Shark White Tip Reef Shark Black Tip Shark Thats all poo poo!!
Bull Shark, Nurse Shark, Gray Shark, Tiger Shark, Mako Shark, Great White Shark and more. hammer shark, whale shark and the tresher shark