Page values for "Shark-tooth pattern"

From Nookipedia, the Animal Crossing wiki

"fossil" values

1 row is stored for this page
FieldField typeValue
urlStringhttps://nookipedia.com/wiki/Shark-tooth_pattern
nameStringshark-tooth pattern
imageStringShark-Tooth Pattern NH.jpg
image_urlStringhttps://dodo.ac/np/images/4/47/NH_Shark-Tooth_Pattern_Museum.jpg
fossil_sortInteger2
typeStringStandalone
acBooleanNo
wwBooleanYes
cfBooleanYes
nlBooleanYes
nhBooleanYes

"ww_fossil_group" values

1 row is stored for this page
FieldField typeValue
nameStringShark-tooth pattern
descriptionTextIt is believed that sharks existed long before even dinosaurs appeared... However, a shark's skeleton is made from cartilage and is softer than bone. As a result, very few have survived as fossils, eh wot? Fortunately, we CAN research them when we find a shark tooth. Ah! Oh, so very sorry! I... I cannot help it, really. And that's the tooth! Hoo!

"cf_fossil_group" values

1 row is stored for this page
FieldField typeValue
nameStringShark-tooth pattern
descriptionTextCapital! Unheard of! What a first-rate fossil! Sharks were actually around a long time before dinosaurs appeared on the scene, eh wot? They developed into the perfect predator, and since then they haven't changed a smidgen!

"nl_fossil_group" values

1 row is stored for this page
FieldField typeValue
nameStringShark-tooth pattern
descriptionTextThe fossilized shark tooth has a distinctive serrated edge, like a steak knife. Sharks have existed since before the dinosaurs, but their appearance seems to have hardly changed at all. Their age actually puts them at a time even before plants had fully propagated over every continent.

"nh_fossil_group" values

1 row is stored for this page
FieldField typeValue
nameStringShark-tooth pattern
roomInteger1
descriptionTextThis shark-tooth pattern comes from the lower jaw of an ancient shark of the genus Helicoprion. Its teeth seem to have grown in a distinctive arrangement rather disturbingly termed a "tooth-whorl". I say "seem" because shark skeletons are made not of bone, but cartilage, except for their teeth. Consequently, their bodies are never preserved as fossils, and questions about their jaws remain unanswered. The size and placement in the stone of the shark's teeth are actually the only things we have to work with. Sometimes in research we must maintain a stiff upper lip, even in the absence of a stiff lower jaw!

"ww_fossil" values

1 row is stored for this page
FieldField typeValue
numberInteger9
nameStringshark tooth
imageStringShark Tooth WW Model.png
image_urlStringhttps://dodo.ac/np/images/5/5f/Shark_Tooth_WW_Model.png
fossil_groupString
sellInteger1,000
color1StringGray
color2StringBrown
themeStringOld-school
hra_baseInteger300
widthFloat1.0
lengthFloat1.0

"cf_fossil" values

1 row is stored for this page
FieldField typeValue
numberInteger9
nameStringshark tooth
imageStringShark Tooth CF Model.png
image_urlStringhttps://dodo.ac/np/images/a/a5/Shark_Tooth_CF_Model.png
fossil_groupString
sellInteger1,000
color1StringGray
color2StringBrown
themeStringRetro
hra_baseInteger300
widthFloat1.0
lengthFloat1.0

"nl_fossil" values

1 row is stored for this page
FieldField typeValue
nameStringshark tooth
imageStringShark Tooth NL Model.png
image_urlStringhttps://dodo.ac/np/images/b/b2/Shark_Tooth_NL_Model.png
fossil_groupString
sellInteger1,000
color1StringGray
color2StringBrown
styleStringHistorical
themeString
hha_baseInteger51
widthFloat1.0
lengthFloat1.0

"nh_fossil" values

1 row is stored for this page
FieldField typeValue
nameStringshark-tooth pattern
imageStringShark-Tooth Pattern NH Icon.png
image_urlStringhttps://dodo.ac/np/images/b/b1/Shark-Tooth_Pattern_NH_Icon.png
fossil_groupString
interactableBooleanNo
sellInteger1,000
color1StringBeige
color2StringBrown
hha_baseInteger87
widthFloat1.0
lengthFloat1.0