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
Galeorhinus ypresiensis
(
Casier, 1946
)
Fig. 23
N–P
Eugaleus ypresiensis
Casier, 1946: 86–89
, pl.1, fig. 11a–t.
Galeorhinus ypresiensis
–
Kemp 1982
: pl. 9, fig. 4.
Material examined
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
–
Alabama
• 3 isolated teeth;
Claiborne Group
;
MSC
37693.1
–
2
,
MSC
37898
.
Description
Teeth do not exceed
4.5 mm
in mesiodistal width. Main cusp thin, triangular, and distally inclined. Mesial edge of main cusp ranges from straight to slightly concave. Distal edge of main cusp slightly convex. Large distal heel with four-to-five triangular distal cusplets, which decrease in size distally. A series of weak serrations present on mesial cutting edge, most prominent on the lower third. Labial crown face flat, bulbous basally and overhanging root, with faint wrinkling at the mesial half of the labial crown foot. Lingual crown face strongly convex. Root lobes are divergent and rounded. Interlobe area shallow. Root high and thick lingually and covers much of the crown face. Nutritive grooves deep and wide; forms a basal notch on the root base.
Remarks
The specimens in our sample are similar in overall morphology to those of
Galeorhinus duchaussoisi
,
G. louisi
, and
G. mesetaensis
, but are easily differentiated by having prominent mesial denticulations. Furthermore, the teeth of
G. ypresiensis
lack heavy crenulations across the labial crown base as seen on the teeth of
G. louisi
(see above). The teeth of
G. ypresiensis
are further differentiated from those of
G. mesetaensis
by the complete absence of ornamentation on the lingual crown face, and teeth of
G. duchaussoisi
(see above) can attain larger overall sizes (up to
6.7 mm
in mesiodistal width as opposed to
4.5 mm
for
G. ypresiensis
). The teeth of
G. ypresiensis
are similar to some tooth positions of
Physogaleus
(see below) but can be differentiated by having a more convex labial crown face and a more bulbous labial crown base that overhangs the root.
Stratigraphic and geographic range in
Alabama
The specimens in our sample were collected from the Gosport Sand at site ACl-15. Middle Bartonian, Zone NP17.