Taxonomy and biostratigraphy of the elasmobranchs and bony fishes (Chondrichthyes and Osteichthyes) of the lower-to-middle Eocene (Ypresian to Bartonian) Claiborne Group in Alabama, USA, including an analysis of otoliths
Author
Ebersole, Jun A.
Author
Cicimurri, David J.
Author
Stringer, Gary L.
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2019
2019-12-06
585
1
274
journal article
24105
10.5852/ejt.2019.585
dca608e8-fccf-4c1c-b8df-ef0c28e1d518
3660259
181B6FBA-ED75-4BB4-84C4-FB512B794749
Myliobatis
sp. 1
Fig. 47
A–J
Material examined
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
–
Alabama
• 312 isolated teeth;
Claiborne Group
;
MSC
33262,
MSC
33293,
MSC
33294,
MSC
33317,
MSC
33319,
MSC
33332,
MSC
33344,
MSC
33345,
MSC
33347,
MSC
33350,
MSC
33351,
MSC
33362 (
2 specimens
),
MSC
33363,
MSC
33366,
MSC
33394,
MSC
33396,
MSC
33402,
MSC
33420,
MSC
33471,
MSC
33496,
MSC
33529,
MSC
33536,
MSC
33573,
MSC
33655,
MSC
33672,
MSC
33677,
MSC
33865,
MSC
33878,
MSC
33883,
MSC
33904,
MSC
33913,
MSC
33915,
MSC
33925,
MSC
33928,
MSC
35747 (
6 specimens
),
MSC
35748 (
4 specimens
),
MSC
35751 (
3 specimens
),
MSC
38881 (
222 specimens
),
MSC
38937 (
7 specimens
),
MSC
38938 (
15 specimens
),
MSC
38940 (
16 specimens
),
MSC
38941 (
5 specimens
)
.
Description
Median teeth wider than long, thick-crowned, six-sided with sharp lateral angles. Labial face weakly concave, slightly lingually inclined, has sharp and labially protruding crown foot. Lingual face weakly convex, slightly lingually inclined, has narrow and angular furrow located immediately above a rounded transverse ridge at crown foot. Labial face bears large and widely spaced vertical ridges that become weaker apically. Secondary ornament of fine anastomosing vertical ridges between large ones. Lingual face similarly ornamented, but more strongly than the labial face. The root is polyaulocorhize, labial face basiolingually directed, lingual margin extends beyond the crown foot. Lateral teeth six-sided and may be symmetrical (1:1 width/length ratio) or wider than long (2:1 ratio). Ornament and root morphology consistent with that observed on median teeth.
Remarks
Teeth of
Myliobatis
sp. 1 occur within the Tallahatta Formation along with several other members of the
Myliobatinae
, including
Pseudaetobatus
,
Aetomylaeus
, and
Leidybatis
.
Myliobatis
sp. 1 teeth have inclined, concave/convex labial and lingual faces, as opposed to being vertical and straight on
Pseudaetobatus
, and the labial and lingual ridging is coarser than on
Pseudaetobatus
. The occlusal surface of
Myliobatis
sp. 1 lacks the tuberculated enameloid covering of
Leidybatis
.
Aetomylaeus
differs in having a reticulated and tuberculated appearance on the labial and lingual faces, as opposed to being wrinkled.
Rhinoptera
bears weaker labial and lingual wrinkling, the crown faces are vertical and straight, and the root is very low with a vertical labial face and lingual margin that does not extend past the crown foot. Heavily worn teeth of
Myliobatis
sp. 1 can be identified by their heavily crenulated labial crown margin. Although similar in gross morphology,
Myliobatis
sp. 1 differs from the temporally younger
Myliobatis
sp. 2 of the
Lisbon
Formation and Gosport Sand (see below) in lacking any reticulation but having a highly crenulated labial crown foot.
Several Eocene species of
Myliobatis
have been described, but comments on labial/lingual ornament are usually lacking, and dentitions of extant species can be highly variable (see Hovestadt & Hovestadt- Euler 2013). Without having directly compared our Tallahatta teeth to the
type
specimens of those Eocene species, we cannot confidently make a more specific determination.
Stratigraphic and geographic range in
Alabama
The specimens in our sample were collected from the Meridian Sand Member of the Tallahatta Formation and the lower Tallahatta Formation at site ADl-1. Upper Ypresian to lower Lutetian, zones NP12 to NP14.