vomit dating back 66 million years, recently found in the Cliffs of Stevns, a white chalk cliff and UNESCO World Heritage site on the Danish island of Zealand.
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During the Cretaceous period, a shark — or another type of fish — must have consumed sea lilies, a type of marine invertebrate. According to a report in The New York Times, Jesper Milan, the curator of the Geomuseum Faxe, said that “they aren’t that great to eat because they are almost entirely skeleton. So, they took what they could and threw up the rest.”
Amateur fossil hunter Peter Bennicke stumbled upon the find in November 2024 when he split a piece of chalk and discovered the fossilised vomit.
Milan suggested that the vomit may have come from a bottom-dwelling shark with crushing teeth, similar to the modern-day Port Jackson shark found in Australia, rather than a shark with sharp teeth.
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