I remember reading once that is has about 3500 teeth.
a shark has 3 rows of teeth and about 3,000 teeth in a life time.
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I think it is safe to say that the larger carnivores such as Gigantosaurus, Allosaurus and Tyrannosaurus had the largest teeth.
A bull shark is a large fish with multiple rows of teeth. In fact, the bull shark has fifty different rows of strong teeth!
A bull shark can have up to fifty rows of teeth. When teeth fall out, they are replaced with new ones, similar to how humans lose their baby teeth.
A shark can have as many as 50,000 teeth in it's lifetime with 5 to 15 rows in it's upper and lower jaw.
The great white sharks actually have that many teeth and they have three rows of them. This applies to all sharks that they have many rows of teeth or just many teeth.
A shark.
Piranhas have just a single row of triangular teeth on both the upper and lower jaws. Their close relatives, the pacu, have two rows of square teeth.
A bull shark can have up to fifty rows of teeth. When teeth fall out, they are replaced with new ones, similar to how humans lose their baby teeth.
Sharks have rows upon rows of teeth in their mouth and when the teeth fall out the new row of teeth is ready to come through.
They have several rows of them and, unlike humans, there teeth came regrow as many times as is needed in the life of the shark. On a beach near me you can find shark teeth all the time on the sand.