It is the Great White Shark
Although it is thought that the Greenland Shark and the Pacific Sleeper Shark could conceivably reach larger sizes. The Greenland Shark feeds on fish and seals, but has been thought to feed on larger mammals as well, such as reindeer, and polar bears.
The animal with the most teeth is the spinner shark, which can have up to 60 rows of teeth with hundreds of teeth in total. Each tooth is small and pointed, helping the shark catch and eat its prey efficiently.
Shark teeth are made of dentin, a hard tissue similar to bone, covered by a layer of enamel. They have a conical shape and are constantly regenerating throughout the shark's life to replace lost or worn teeth.
Yes, a barracuda's teeth are sharper than a shark's. Barracudas have needle-like teeth that are designed to slice through flesh efficiently, while shark teeth are more triangular and designed for gripping and tearing prey.
The goblin shark is known for having the sharpest teeth.
Yes a frilled shark does have teeth infact a frilled shark has 300 teeth arranged into about 25 rows.
they have teeth sort of alike to a grey shark look up that shark yourself
the most frightning thing about a shark it is teeth
the great blue shark
A Milicred
By the teeth marks left behind, the type of shark can be narrowed down.
bears do not have the most teeth. I think a crocodile and shark have more teeth than a bear
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.
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.
the great white shark
the ones with teeth
the beach
The animal with the most teeth is the spinner shark, which can have up to 60 rows of teeth with hundreds of teeth in total. Each tooth is small and pointed, helping the shark catch and eat its prey efficiently.