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Can you take shells from Myrtle Beach?

Myrtle Beach visitors often bring home a baggie or pocketful of shells and sharks' teeth. Most rummage through whatever washes up, and that's fine in most cases. Sometimes, you want to go above and beyond with a few tricks. The Grand Strand boasts both prime sharks' teeth hunting and shell gathering.



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How to Find Shells and Sharks' Teeth in Myrtle Beach. There are treasures found from the sea every day in Myrtle Beach. They come in the form of sea glass, seashells, and sharks' teeth. It's fun to hit the beach early in the day or on a lazy afternoon, searching for gems.

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Hundred-eyed cowrie shell (Cypraea argus) The hundred-eyed cowrie shell species is one of the rarest seashells in the world. You will be lucky to spot this unusual sea jewel feeding whilst diving or snorkeling shallow coral reefs.

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Sanibel Island Shelling – Travel & Leisure Ranked Sanibel Island #1 of the Top 10 Best U.S Shelling Beaches. Shell-lovers from all over the world make pilgrimages to tiny Sanibel Island's Gulf Coast, considered the best shelling spot in North America according to Travel & Leisure Magazine.

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Fort Bragg, California Glass Beach is adjacent to MacKerricher State Park and is one of three beaches in Fort Bragg that were official dumpsites in the 1940s. As a result, this is the sea glass beach, probably the best and most unique in the world. Basically, the entire beach is made up of sea glass instead of sand.

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