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POTOMAC RIVER BEACH Fossils

Rock&Gem Magazine

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July 2023

Finding Fossil Shark Teeth & Turritella at Purse Beach

- ROBERT BEARD

POTOMAC RIVER BEACH Fossils

The Purse area, which is on the western side of Maryland along the Potomac River, is an easily accessible shark tooth and turritella fossil locality. The Purse area is the former Purse State Park, which has been absorbed into the Nanjemoy Wildlife Management Area (WMA) which consists of several parcels of land along the east side of the Potomac River and along State Route 224 in southwestern Charles County. The Nanjemoy WMA is open to the public, and recreational activities include bird watching, fishing, and hunting as well as collecting fossils on the beach.

SHARK TEETH FOSSILIZATION

Shark teeth are one of the few easily recognizable parts of a shark that fossilizes. The internal skeleton of sharks is cartilage and disappears soon after burial in sediments. The main exceptions are the teeth and dermal ossicles, which are the tiny hard sandpaper-like protrusions on shark skin. The central vertebrate can also become calcified and is occasionally fossilized. Cartilage does not mineralize like bones and breaks down much quicker than the hard parts of a shark. Teeth are the most common shark fossil, but sometimes the fossilized dermal ossicles and pieces of vertebrate are found in the same sediments. The dermal ossicles are tiny and are not as easy to identify as the shark teeth.

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