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Over the years, while exploring the deep sea, our Corps of Exploration has been fortunate enough to witness (and even sometimes sample) fossilized shark teeth from the deep seafloor. Many of these teeth belonged to the famous Megalodon or its relatives- something scientists can tell by examining the tooth’s shape and size. Most of the ones we come across are also covered in a crust of ferromanganese rock: a black mineral deposit that precipitates very slowly from seawater and coats objects found on the deep ocean floor. These mineral deposits form at an average rate of 2.5 mm per million years, and their thickness can be used to approximately age objects covered by this coating. Luckily for us, sharks lose many teeth over their lifetime, replacing them in a conveyor-belt fashion and leaving evidence behind for us ocean explorers. All of the shark teeth spotted by our remotely-operated-vehicles in this video were found while diving in the waters of the Cook Islands during the 2025 NA176 expedition. For three weeks, our Corps of Exploration explored at depths greater than 5,100 meters (17,000 feet). Much of that exploration was concentrated on the abyssal plain- a habitat with stable conditions perfect for finding shark teeth. Subscribe for more deep-sea animals, ocean science, and real exploration from Nautilus Live. Exploration Vessel Nautilus is exploring unknown regions of the ocean seeking out new discoveries while pushing the boundaries of STEAM education and technological innovation. Join us 24/7 for live video from the seafloor and the ship. To engage with our explorers at-sea aboard E/V Nautilus visit www.NautilusLive.org. Follow us on social media for dive updates, expedition highlights, and more: Subscribe on YouTube: @EVNautilus TikTok: / nautiluslive Instagram: www.instagram.com/nautiluslive Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/nautiluslive... Facebook: www.facebook.com/nautiluslive X: www.twitter.com/evnautilus LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/ocean-exploration-trust/