Great White Shark
A shark can have hundreds of teeth in its mouth and, conveniently, can replace them if they fall out or become damaged.
Many Sharp Rows
Throughout its life, a shark's old teeth are shed continually, and new ones are rotated into place on a conveyer belt-like structure. A shark's teeth are not attached to the jaw, but embedded in the flesh.
A Whale Shark: The Biggest Mouth
The whale shark can grow to 40 feet long but, thankfully, mostly eats plankton.
Attacking The Cage
Razor Sharp
The teeth of a Great White.
A Great White Emerges From The Deep
Feeding Time
A whale shark at an aquarium in Osaka, Japan, gets a treat.
A Great White Toys With a Safety Cage
Reef Shark
Rows of Teeth
The Great White Way
A Great White shark near Cape Town in South Africa, 1997.
A Tiger Shark. . . And Grappling Hooks
A Basking Shark Opens Wide in 1937
Skimming The Surface
Dead on an Irish Dock
It Doesn't Look So Real Any More
Actors Richard Dreyfuss (L) and Robert Shaw stare a mechanical Great White in 1975's 'Jaws.'