Multicuspidate shark teeth associated with chondrichthyan and acanthodian scales from the Emsian (Devonian) of southern Algeria
Author
Derycke, Claire
Author
Goujet, Daniel
text
Geodiversitas
2011
2011-06-30
33
2
209
226
http://dx.doi.org/10.5252/g2011n2a1
journal article
7717
10.5252/g2011n2a1
601437bd-40a5-40dc-8fda-72b0aa119041
1638-9395
4597045
Milesacanthus
cf.
ancestralis
(
Fig. 8
)
MATERIAL
. — Nine scales, one of which is lost (M N H N. F.A L D -4 0), a n d o n e t h i n s e c t i o n
MNHN
.F.ALD-41.
DESCRIPTION
The crown of these four scales is diamond-shaped and its anterior part may be more rounded as in
MNHN
.F.ALD-38 (
Fig. 8C
2
). The convex base, also diamond-shaped, and with anterior and rounded posterior edges is located anteriorly.
The scales with a flat crown show sub-parallel grooves (18 for
Fig. 8A
1
, B
2
and possibly more), diverging in the front part (
Fig. 8C
2
), like in the material of
Milesacanthus ancestralis
from
Saudi Arabia
.The grooves are not really deep but narrower than the ridges. Both grooves and ridges run along the entire crown length of the scale. In the scale MNHN.F.ALD-36 (
Fig. 8A
1
), grooves and ridges start just at the front edge of the scale, whereas in the scale MNHN.F.ALD-37 (
Fig. 8B
2
) the ridges start at the vertical edge of the crown and the posterior edge is more crenulated.
One scale (ALD-38) shows 13 larger grooves (
Fig. 8C
2
), but only in its anterior part. Pore openings, located mainly at the beginning of the grooves, connect to an ascending canal system. The grooves begin after the anterior edge of the crown and most lateral grooves undulate, slightly converging in the beginning, then parallel to the diagonal, and stop in the posterior third of the crown. The neck is well marked with a row of foramina posteriorly and anteriorly (
Fig. 8A
2
, B
2
, C
2
). Furthermore, wart-like protuberances are visible on the posterior neck (
Fig. 8A
2
; more evident on
Fig. 7F
), visible on “young” scales according
Burrow
et al.
(2006: 547)
.
HISTOLOGY
The thin section 9
MNHN
.F.ALD-41 (
Fig. 7G
) shows a classical pattern for an acanthodian, with a primordium in the middle of the crown that is made of dentine covered with thin box-in-box growth zones continuing from the crown into the acellular bone base. Contrary to
Milesacanthus ancestralis
and
M. antarctica
(
Young & Burrow 2004
)
, no vascular canal was found, but only one thin section has been made.
DISCUSSION
The number and the development of ridges on the crown recalls the scales of
M. antarctica
, but the presence of wart-like bumps in the posterior part of the neck is more suggestive of
M. ancestralis
. Although wide canals were not detected here, they are present in both
M. ancestralis
and
M. antarctica
, and pore openings are visible at the surface of the scale
MNHN
.F.ALD-38 (
Fig. 8C
2
). The cone of the base inserted in the crown is, in our material, more developed. In conclusion, some acanthodian scales are closer to
M. antarctica
and the others to
M. ancestralis
but their histology is different.