Isurus hastalis  - Peru

SKU
P314
In stock
$70.00
Overview

A colorful, Top Quality Carcharodon hastalis tooth from the Ica region of Peru. An incredible tan colored crown and a tan root. Fantastic color! Sharp cutting edges. Excellent definition and preservation. An excellent upper jaw anterior tooth. No repair. Authenticity guaranteed. An excellent colorful collector's Mako tooth. 

P314              SIZE: 1-1/2"

Adding 20 Carcharodon hastalis teeth in August 2021.      Link to Peruvian Hastalis teeth.

This catalog contains exceptional teeth from the big-tooth Mako shark - Isurus hastalis. The upper jaw teeth are noted for their well defined triangular crown and broad roots (upper jaw) while the lower jaw teeth exhibit  slender crowns - all  without serrations. Complete lower jaw teeth are hard to find since they are much more fragile. Miocene age (14-6 million years ago). Collected in the Ica area. Top quality Peruian I. hastalis teeth are always tough to find! You can not beat the best quality Peruvian Isurus teeth. These Peruvian Makos are essentially impossible to find any more. There are some incredible colorful gems in this group. Our best ever group top quality collector's Peruvian Mako teeth! Note - No new supply available for 10+ years.

What’s in a name? For the fifty years, Isurus hastalis was known to me and others as the Big-tooth Mako shark tooth that collectors sought from Miocene – Pliocene deposits. Everyone wanted to find a big Mako tooth. In 2001, Purdy (Smithsonsian) resurrected Isurus xiphodon for the broad-form Mako teeth at Lee Creek. It made sense, but now it is not considered a valid species. In 1964, Glikman proposed the Cosmopolitodus genus for the "hastalis" shark as Isurus hastalis was related to the Great White shark rather than the Mako. This convention was not adopted in the scientific community until the last decade; particularly with the naming of the Carcharodon hubbelli, the Great White transition tooth (late Miocene). There is also a push to rename the genus of the shark formerly known as Isurus hastalis to Carcharodon hastalis recognizing that it is an early form of the Great White shark. Ok, Isurus hastalis and Isurus xiphodon names going away, but the future genus name for "hastlis" appears to be unsettled. What do we call this shark if it is not a Mako? More to come in my Blog article.