Malta's iconic yellow Globigerina Limestone holds a Miocene marine fauna including Otodus megalodon teeth famously displayed at the Natural History Museum in Mdina. Pwales Beach and surrounding coastal exposures (Għar Lapsi, St Thomas Bay) are the classic in-situ contexts. Casual surface collecting tolerated; export restricted.
Walk the foreshore at low water; check shell-and-pebble lag at the base of yellow limestone bluffs. Boat trips to Għar Lapsi sea caves occasionally turn up loose teeth in cave-floor sediment.
Public coastal access. The most famous historic finds came from quarries; many are now closed. Pwales is the practical hobby destination.
Maltese cultural heritage law (Cultural Heritage Act 2002) restricts removal of significant fossils. Personal-interest surface collecting is generally tolerated; commercial-quantity removal and export are prohibited without permits.
Trophy = headline find · Rare = real score · Uncommon = some trips · Common = most trips.
The beachcomber's bonus round — what else the geology gives up.
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