Glyphis pagoda ( Noetling 1901 )

Shimada, Kenshu, Egi, Naoko, Tsubamoto, Takehisa, Nishioka, Yuichiro, Sonoda, Teppei & Takai, Masanaru, 2016, The extinct river shark Glyphis pagoda from the Miocene of Myanmar and a review of the fossil record of the genus Glyphis (Carcharhiniformes: Carcharhinidae), Zootaxa 4161 (2), pp. 237-251 : 240-245

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4161.2.6

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F0DED669-A970-4DC8-B8C0-E7C06AA29CB6

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6055408

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A7879B-FFA3-2265-FF38-FE25FA22FA36

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Glyphis pagoda ( Noetling 1901 )
status

 

Glyphis pagoda ( Noetling 1901)

( Figs. 2 View FIGURE 2 , 3 View FIGURE 3 B, 3C)

Carcharias (Prionodon) View in CoL sp. Noetling 1895: 45.

Oxyrhina pagoda Noetling 1901: 372 , pl. XXV, figs. 1, 1a–1e, 2, 2a–2e, 3, 3a–3b.

Oxyrhina spallanzanii Bonaparte. Noetling 1901: 372 –373, pl. XXV, figs. 4, 5, 5a–e, 6, 6a–e.

Carcharias (Prionodon) gangeticus Müller & Henle. Noetling 1901: 375 , pl. XXV, figs. 11a–e, 12a, 12b, 13a, 13b, 14a, 14b, 15a, 15b.

Oxyrhina spallanzanii Bonaparte. Stuart 1910: 294 , pl. 25, figs. 9, 9a, 10, 10a, pl. 26, figs. 1, 2, 12, 12a.

Carcharias (Prionodon) collata Cope. Stuart 1910: 296 , pl. 26, figs. 12, 12a.

Carchariolamna heroni Hora 1939: 203 , text-fig. 1b, pl. 13, figs. 1–4.

Oxyrhina Agassiz. Hora 1939: 206 , text-fig. 2, pl. 13, figs. 5, 6.

Prionodon Müller & Henle. Hora 1939: 206 View in CoL , 207, text-fig. 3 (left figure only; right figure may be tooth of Carcharhinus View in CoL sp.), pl. 13, 7–10.

Aprionodon Gill. Hora 1939: 209 –210, text-fig. 6, pl. 13, figs. 16–20.

Prionodon pagoda (Noetling) . Leriche 1954: 7.

Prionodon View in CoL sp. (Noetling). Leriche 1954: 7.

Oxyrhina pagoda Noetling. Sarma 1957: 104 , fig. 8.

Carcharodon megalodon Agassiz. Sarma 1957: 104 , fig. 10.

Carcharias (Prionodon) gangeticus Müller & Henle. Sarma 1957: 104 , fig. 11.

Oxyrhina spallanzanii Bonaparte. Sarma 1957 : fig. 12.

Carchariolamna heroni Hora. Tewari 1959: 2 –4, pl. X, fig. 1–3, text-fig. 2. 3.

Carcharhinus pagoda (Noetling) . Mohanti 1966: A76.

Carcharinus jhingrani Mehrotra, Misra & Srivastava 1973: 181 , pl. 1, fig. 1.

Carcharinus (Prionodon) gangeticus (Müller & Henle) . Mehrotra, Misra & Srivastava 1973: 183, pl. 1, fig. 2.

Isurus spallanzanii (Bonaparte) . Mehrotra, Misra & Srivastava 1973: 187 –188, pl. 1, fig. 10a, b.

Isurus pagoda (Noetling) . Mehrotra, Misra & Srivastava 1973: 188, pl. 1, fig. 11.

Isurus rameshi Mehrotra, Misra & Srivastava 1973: 188 , pl. 1, fig. 12.

Carcharodon tandoni Mehrotra, Misra & Srivastava 1973: 189 , pl. 2, fig. 4a, b.

Carcharodon carcharias Linnaeus. Mehrotra, Misra & Srivastava 1973: 191 View in CoL , pl. 2, fig. 2 (caption " Carcharodon barcharias " [sic]), 6a, b.

Oxyrhina pagoda Noetling. Bhalla & Dev 1975: 98 .

Isurus spallanzanii (Bonaparte) . Sahni & Mehrotra 1981: 99, pl. 1, fig. 1.

Isurus pagoda (Noetling) . Sahni & Mehrotra 1981: 99, pl. 1, fig. 7.

Isurus rameshi Mehrotra, Misra & Srivastava. Sahni & Mehrotra 1981: 99 , pl. 1, fig. 2.

Carcharodon carcharias Linnaeus. Sahni & Mehrotra 1981: 99 View in CoL , pl. 1, figs. 3–6.

Carcharodon tandoni Mehrotra, Misra & Srivastava. Sahni & Mehrotra 1981: 99 , pl. 1, fig. 9.

Carcharinus jhingrani Mehrotra, Misra & Srivastava. Sahni & Mehrotra 1981: 100 , pl. 2, fig. 3.

Isurus pagoda (Noetling) . Bhalla & Dev 1984b: 2, pl. I, fig. 9, 10.

Isurus spallanzanii (Bonaparte) . Bhalla & Dev 1984b: 2, pl. I, fig. 2.

Carcharhinus collatus Eastman. Bhalla & Dev 1984b: 4 , pl. I, fig. 5.

Isurus pagoda (Noetling) . Bhalla & Dev 1988: table 1.

Carcharodon carcharias Linnaeus. Mondal, Das, Mallick & Adhikary 2009: 141 View in CoL , pl. II, figs. 1, 2.

Isurus desori Sismonda. Mondal, Das, Mallick & Adhikary 2009: 142 (in part), pl. II, figs. 11, 12.

Isurus oxyrinchus Rafinesque. Mondal, Das, Mallick & Adhikary 2009: 144 View in CoL (in part), pl. II, figs. 14, 15.

Isurus pagoda (Noetling) . Mondal, Das, Mallick & Adhikary 2009: 144, pl. III, figs. 1–3.

Carcharodon carcharias Linnaeus. Ralte, Tiwari, Malsawma & Malsawma 2011: 332 View in CoL , pl. 1, figs. 3a, 3b, 4a, 4b, 5a, 5b.

Isurus spallanzanii (Bonaparte) . Ralte, Tiwari, Malsawma & Malsawma 2011: 333, pl. 1, figs. 11a, 11b, 12a, 12b, 14a, 14b (not 13a–13c that is? Hemipristis serra ).

Isurus pagoda (Noetling) . Ralte, Tiwari, Malsawma & Malsawma 2011: 335, pl. 1, figs. 10a, 10b.

Glyphis pagoda (Noetling) . Cappetta 2012, p. 305.

Glyphis pagoda (Noetling) . Chavasseau, Aung Aung Khyaw, Chaimanee, Coster, Emonet, Aung Naing Soe, Rugbumrung, Soe Thura Tun & Jaeger 2013: table 19.5.

Carcharodon carcharias Linnaeus. Tiwari & Jauhri 2014 View in CoL : pl. III, fig. c.

Isurus oxyrinchus Rafinesque. Sharma & Patnaik 2014: 293 View in CoL , pl. 1, fig. 1a–c.

Isurus pagoda (Noetling) . Sharma & Patnaik 2014: 293, pl. 1, fig. 2a–c.

Isurus desori Sismonda. Sharma & Patnaik 2014: 293 , 294, pl. 1, fig. 3a, b.

Carcharodon carcharias Linnaeus. Sharma & Patnaik 2014: 294 View in CoL , pl. 1, fig. 4a, b.

Emended diagnosis. Carcharhiniform teeth with orthodentine tooth histology and exhibiting strong dignathic heterodonty along with following combination of characters: upper teeth—broad triangular crown that approaches equilateral triangle; labial crown face flat and lingual face weakly convex; both labial and lingual faces smooth without any ornamentation; mesial margin of crown gently curved inward or nearly straight; occlusal half of distal margin gently convex or straight; basal half of distal margin gently to strongly concave; both mesial and distal margins finely serrated but coarser towards base; lingual crown base gently convex apically and labial crown base nearly straight; tooth neck practically absent on labial face and very narrow on lingual face; root rectangular and is as wide as crown base; root weakly bilobed with slight basal concavity and relatively sharp mesiobasal and distobasal corners; labiolingual thickness of root as thick as crown; lingual protuberance practically absent but generally with nutritive pore at center of lingual root face that continues basally as well-marked nutritive groove; both mesial and distal borders of nutritive groove generally slightly extending basally; lower teeth—narrow, sharply-pointed crown with sigmoidal profile and tooth root that may be narrow or broad; labial crown face gently convex and lingual face strongly convex; both labial and lingual faces smooth without ornamentation; apex of crown in teeth with narrow root may be distinctly broad to form spearhead shape; mesial and distal cutting edges weak in teeth with spearhead-shaped apex; fine serrations on portions with strong mesial and distal cutting edges; mesial and distal crown base may be substantially spread mesiodistally and may exhibit a pair of low, blunt lateral cusplets at terminal ends; lingual crown base weakly convex apically and labial crown base nearly straight; tooth neck practically absent on labial face and very narrow on lingual face; root weakly to strongly bilobed with low to high basal concavity, respectively; tip of each root lobe rounded; labiolingual thickness of root as thick as crown; lingual protuberance practically absent but with nutritive groove that continues basally at center of lingual root face.

Type material. Noetling (1901) did not specify any type materials, but his three illustrated teeth of ' Oxyrhina pagoda ' are here considered the type series for the species: GSI 0 7773 ( Noetling, 1901, pl. 25, fig. 1, 1a-e), GSI 0 7774 ( Noetling, 1901, pl. 25, fig. 2, 2a–e), and GSI 0 7775 ( Noetling, 1901, pl. 25, fig. 3, 3a–b). It should be noted that his three illustrated teeth of ' Oxyrhina spallanzanii ', which would constitute the type material for the species, are here considered conspecific with Glyphis pagoda : GSI 0 7776 ( Noetling, 1901, pl. 25, fig. 4), GSI 0 7777 ( Noetling, 1901, pl. 25, fig. 5, 5a–e), and GSI 0 7778 ( Noetling, 1901, pl. 25, fig. 6, 6a [top], 6a [bottom; likely sic], 6b–d). Likewise, his five illustrated teeth of ' Carcharias (Prionodon) gangeticus ', which would constitute the type material for the species, are here considered conspecific with Glyphis pagoda : GSI 0 7783 ( Noetling, 1901, pl. 25, fig. 11, 11a–e), GSI 0 7784 ( Noetling, 1901, pl. 25, fig. 12, 12a–b), GSI 0 7785, ( Noetling, 1901, pl. 25, fig. 13, 13a– b), GSI 0 7786 ( Noetling, 1901, pl. 25, fig. 14, 14a–b), and GSI 0 7787 ( Noetling, 1901, pl. 25, fig. 15, 15a–b).

New material. NMMP-KU-IR 1496 ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 C), nearly complete upper tooth from TeB-PG1 locality; NMMP- KU-IR 1522(1) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 D), nearly complete lower tooth from YS2 locality; NMMP-KU-IR 1522(2) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 E), nearly complete upper tooth YS2 locality; NMMP-KU-IR 1530(1) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 F), nearly complete lower tooth from OND locality; NMMP-KU-IR 1530(2) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 H), nearly complete lower tooth from OND locality; NMMP-KU-IR 1530(3) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 I), nearly complete lower tooth from OND locality; NMMP-KU-IR 1530(4) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 J), broken crown of lower tooth from OND locality; NMMP-KU-IR 1530(5) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 G), crown of lower tooth (broken longitudinally exposing cross-sectional surfaces) from OND locality; NMMP-KU-IR 1530(6) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 A, B), complete lower tooth in matrix from OND locality; NMMP-KU-IR 1530(7) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 K), partial upper tooth from OND locality; NMMP- KU-IR 1530(8) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 M), nearly complete upper tooth from OND locality; NMMP-KU-IR 1 530(9) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 L), distal(?) half of upper tooth from OND locality; NMMP-KU-IR 1530(10) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 O), crown of upper tooth from OND locality; NMMP-KU-IR 1530(11) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 N), incomplete crown of upper tooth from OND locality; NMMP- KU-IR 1530(12) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 P), nearly complete lower tooth from OND locality; NMMP-KU-IR 1530(13) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 Q), nearly complete lower(?) tooth from OND locality; NMMP-KU-IR 1530(14) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 R), crown of lower tooth from OND locality; NMMP-KU-IR 1 530(15) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 S), complete lower tooth from OND locality; NMMP-KU-IR 1530(16) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 T), nearly complete lower tooth from OND locality; NMMP-KU-IR 1530(17) ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 U), crown of lower tooth from OND locality.

Description. Twenty isolated teeth ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ), one of which still encased in matrix exposing only its labial side ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 A, B); most teeth partially damaged or, where complete, generally show slight to moderate taphonomicallyinduced abrasion indicated by worn tooth surfaces ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 C, D); tooth size ranges from 10.0 mm to 18.5 mm in total tooth height (Appendix 1); orthodentine tooth histology with pulp cavity observable in specimens with damaged crown ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 G). Seven teeth identified as upper teeth characterized by broad, distally inclined triangular crown where crown width may slightly exceed crown height (Appendix 1). Crown inclinations suggesting as many as four of them are from the right side and three from the left side; remaining 13 specimens identified as lower teeth possess acutely-pointing, nearly erect cusp that may or may not have broad base. Six teeth are probably from the right side and seven possibly from left side.

Upper teeth―Crown ranging from about 8.0 mm to 12.4 mm in height (n = 6), from 9.8 mm to 11.9 mm in width (n = 2), and from 1.5 mm to 3.3 mm in thickness (n = 7) (Appendix 1; note that small sample size for crown widths is due to damaged crown base in most specimens); crown mesiodistally broad at base without prominent shoulders and overall narrows gradually apically; mesiodistal extensions of crown base short; lateral cusplets absent; fine, regularly-distributed serrations along mesial and distal cutting edges in which slight coarsening of serrations occur at basal one-third of crown; labial crown face smooth and slightly convex whereas lingual crown face smooth and flat; labial crown foot nearly straight whereas lingual crown foot gently curved; basal ledge or groove, and ornamentation (e.g., striations) absent on both sides of crown foot; tooth neck practically absent on both sides; crowns generally asymmetrical with varying degrees of distal inclination; root bilobed and as wide as crown, measuring from 11.5 mm to 11.9 mm (n = 2; Appendix 1, where root width equivalent to tooth width); root only slightly thicker than crown thickness, ranging from 2.4 mm to 3.9 mm (n = 5); labial root surface flat; lingual root surface gently convex without prominent lingual protuberance; prominent nutritive groove present; basal concavity very weak and may be interrupted by basally extending ridges of root that define nutritive groove (e.g., Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 E).

Lower teeth―Crown narrower than that in upper teeth, ranging from about 8.0 mm to 13.5 mm in height (n = 11), from 3.6 mm to 8.6 mm in width (n = 10), and from 1.7 mm to 3.3 mm in thickness (n = 10) (Appendix 1); crown base may be mesiodistally narrow (e.g., Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 B, D, F), moderately wide (e.g., Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 P, Q), or broad to form narrow shoulders extending outward (e.g., Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 T) and may even bear a pair of short, blunt lateral cusplets (e.g., Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 S); lingually curved crown developing apically into sharp, narrow cusp with a slight labial flex; spearheadlike slight mesiodistal expansion with well-developed cutting edges present at apex of tall narrow crown in which the rest of the those teeth tend to have weakly developed cutting edge (e.g., Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 B, F–J); fine, regularlydistributed serrations present along mesial and distal cutting edges in teeth with moderately wide crown base; labial crown face strongly convex; labial crown foot nearly straight whereas lingual crown foot gently curved; basal ledge or groove, and ornamentation (e.g., striations) absent on both sides of crown foot; lingual crown face flat and smooth, lacking ornamentation; tooth neck practically absent on both sides; crowns almost symmetrical or with slight inclination; root bilobed and slightly wider than crown base, measuring from 5.7 mm to 10.9 mm (n = 7; Appendix 1, where root width equivalent to total tooth width); root only slightly thicker than crown thickness, ranging from 1.9 mm to 5.5 mm (n = 9; Appendix 1 where root thickness equivalent to tooth thickness); labial root surface slightly rounded; lingual root surface convex without prominent lingual protuberance; prominent nutritive groove present; basal concavity weak ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 D, F, P, S, T) to moderate ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 B, H, I, Q) and may be interrupted by basally extending ridges of root that define nutritive groove ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 F, Q, S).

Taxonomic remarks. Until recently, when the genus Glyphis was resurrected to be a valid taxon within Carcharhiniformes ( Compagno 1984, 1988), the species G. pagoda had been placed under at least the following eight other genera: Aprionodon , Carcharias , Carcharinus , Carchariolamna , Carcharodon , Isurus , Oxyrhina , and Prionodon (see synonymy list above). We note that G. pagoda (with an orthodentine tooth histology) does not belong to Lamniformes (i.e., Carcharias , Carchariolamna , Carcharodon , Isurus , and Oxyrhina ) which has osteodentine tooth histology (e.g., Welton & Farish 1993). We note that a spearhead-shaped crown apex as defined by Noetling (1901) is a diagnostic characteristic for G. pagoda , and there is little doubt that previous reports of the species are genuinely reliable due to this unique crown morphology among Cenozoic elasmobranchs (see Cappetta 2012).

Hora (1939) referred five teeth to Aprionodon sp. from the Miocene of Orissa, India, at least one of which (text-fig. 6) exhibits a narrow crown with a spearhead-shaped apex and is interpreted to be a lower tooth of G. pagoda . Narrow teeth of G. pagoda without a spearhead-shaped apex, here interpreted to be distally located lower teeth, have also been referred to other taxa, such as Carcharias (Prionodon) collata , Carcharhinus collatus , Carchariolamna heroni , Oxyrhina spallanzanii , Oxyrhina sp., Isurus spallanzanii , I. rameshi , I. desori , and I. oxyrinchus (see synonymy list for references). Likewise, broad triangular upper teeth of G. pagoda were previously referred to different taxa, including Carcharias (Prionodon) sp., Carcharias (Prionodon) gangeticus , Carcharinus (Prionodon) gangeticus , Carcharinus jhingrani , Carcharodon carcharias , Carcharodon megalodon , and Carcharodon tandoni (see synonymy list for references).

Noetling (1901) described Glyphis pagoda on the basis of teeth collected from an uncertain Miocene horizon near Thayetmyo, Myanmar. Misidentifications of G. pagoda as other taxa stem from the original diagnosis of the species, which was solely based on the presence of the spearhead-shaped crown apex. Case in point, among some other shark taxa Noetling (1901) reported were teeth of ' O. spallanzanii ' from the same stratigraphic range where specimens of ' O. pagoda ' and ' Carcharias (Prionodon) gangeticus ' occurred. The teeth of O. spallanzanii are similar to O. pagoda , but Noetling (1901, p. 373) noted that the "species is easily distinguished from Oxyrhina pagoda ... by the absence of the arrow-head like expansion of the upper end [= crown apex]." In fact, Noetling's (1901) specimens of O. spallanzanii are within the morphological range of lower teeth in extant Glyphis spp. that may not necessarily exhibit the 'arrow-head like expansion' of the crown apex. Furthermore, Noetling's (1901) description and illustrations of teeth of C. (P.) gangeticus are morphologically consistent with upper teeth of extant Glyphis spp. (e.g., see Müller & Henle 1839, pl. 13; Compagno 1984, p. 509; Cappetta 2012, fig. 287, 288). The fact that localities where G. pagoda is reported generally also yield C. (P.) gangeticus and O. spallanzanii (including those species under different generic assignments) does not contradict our interpretation that all these nominal taxa are conspecific. The original narrow definition of the species by Noetling (1901) clearly led to the perpetuation of misidentification of G. pagoda to other taxa from Miocene deposits in the region (including India) as demonstrated in the synonymy list above. It is particularly ironic that Noetling (1895, p. 45) noted, in describing his ' Carcharias (Prionodon) sp. ' from the Miocene of Myanmar prior to his description of ' O. pagoda ' in 1901, now interpreted to be G. pagoda , that "I refrain from identifying them specifically [to a new species] … considering the great variety in the shape of the teeth according to position, even within the individual."

Figure 3 View FIGURE 3 illustrates the upper and lower dental series of extant G. g l y p h i s as an example to show the diagnathic heterodonty present in the shark as well as to show tentative correspondences in tooth positions of selected teeth of G. pagoda collected in the Miocene of Myanmar ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 ). It also lists, for each morphological range, names of previously misidentified taxa for G. pagoda (see synonymy list above). Nevertheless, the wide morphological range observed in our fossil samples from Myanmar may invoke the question of the possibility that our specimens may represent multiple species, rather than our interpretation that they are all conspecific. We contend that they are conspecific because the range of morphological variation seen in the teeth is within the range of intraindividual variation in extant Glyphis ( Compagno 1984, p. 509), but more significantly because the 20 described fossil teeth are the only shark remains found and collected at those Miocene localities and at least 19 of them occurred in freshwater-deposits (Irrawaddy sediments: see Bender 1983). Among extant sharks, those with low-salinity tolerance are rare. The only extant sharks that regularly inhabit or venture into freshwater environments are Glyphis spp. and the bull shark Carcharhinus leucas (Valenciennes) ( Compagno 1984, 1988). Cases of their cooccurrence in the same river systems are known ( Compagno 1988; Berra 2010), but C. leucas , which has more robust teeth and coarser serrations than Glyphis spp. ( Compagno 1984, 1988), is not recognized in the G. pagoda - bearing Miocene deposits. Therefore, it is more parsimonious to consider that only one freshwater-tolerant shark species, G. pagoda , is present. It is also worth noting that the wide range of tooth morphologies (upper vs. lower as well as mesial vs. distal) represented in our sample is what one might expect to find from random surface sampling.

GSI

Geological Survey of India

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Elasmobranchii

Order

Carcharhiniformes

Family

Carcharhinidae

Genus

Glyphis

Loc

Glyphis pagoda ( Noetling 1901 )

Shimada, Kenshu, Egi, Naoko, Tsubamoto, Takehisa, Nishioka, Yuichiro, Sonoda, Teppei & Takai, Masanaru 2016
2016
Loc

Carcharodon carcharias Linnaeus. Ralte, Tiwari, Malsawma & Malsawma 2011 : 332

Ralte 2011: 332
2011
Loc

Isurus spallanzanii

Ralte 2011: 333
2011
Loc

Isurus pagoda

Ralte 2011: 335
2011
Loc

Carcharodon carcharias Linnaeus. Mondal, Das, Mallick & Adhikary 2009 : 141

Mondal 2009: 141
2009
Loc

Isurus desori Sismonda. Mondal, Das, Mallick & Adhikary 2009 : 142

Mondal 2009: 142
2009
Loc

Isurus oxyrinchus Rafinesque. Mondal, Das, Mallick & Adhikary 2009 : 144

Mondal 2009: 144
2009
Loc

Isurus pagoda

Mondal 2009: 144
2009
Loc

Isurus pagoda

Bhalla 1984: 2
1984
Loc

Isurus spallanzanii

Bhalla 1984: 2
1984
Loc

Carcharhinus collatus Eastman. Bhalla & Dev 1984b : 4

Bhalla 1984: 4
1984
Loc

Isurus spallanzanii

Sahni 1981: 99
1981
Loc

Isurus pagoda

Sahni 1981: 99
1981
Loc

Isurus rameshi Mehrotra, Misra & Srivastava. Sahni & Mehrotra 1981 : 99

Sahni 1981: 99
1981
Loc

Carcharodon carcharias Linnaeus. Sahni & Mehrotra 1981 : 99

Sahni 1981: 99
1981
Loc

Carcharodon tandoni Mehrotra, Misra & Srivastava. Sahni & Mehrotra 1981 : 99

Sahni 1981: 99
1981
Loc

Carcharinus jhingrani Mehrotra, Misra & Srivastava. Sahni & Mehrotra 1981 : 100

Sahni 1981: 100
1981
Loc

Oxyrhina pagoda Noetling. Bhalla & Dev 1975 : 98

Bhalla 1975: 98
1975
Loc

Carcharinus jhingrani Mehrotra, Misra & Srivastava 1973 : 181

Srivastava 1973: 181
1973
Loc

Carcharinus (Prionodon) gangeticus (Müller & Henle)

Srivastava 1973: 183
1973
Loc

Isurus spallanzanii

Srivastava 1973: 187
1973
Loc

Isurus pagoda

Srivastava 1973: 188
1973
Loc

Isurus rameshi Mehrotra, Misra & Srivastava 1973 : 188

Srivastava 1973: 188
1973
Loc

Carcharodon tandoni Mehrotra, Misra & Srivastava 1973 : 189

Srivastava 1973: 189
1973
Loc

Carcharodon carcharias Linnaeus. Mehrotra, Misra & Srivastava 1973 : 191

Srivastava 1973: 191
1973
Loc

Carchariolamna heroni Hora. Tewari 1959 : 2

Tewari 1959: 2
1959
Loc

Oxyrhina pagoda Noetling. Sarma 1957 : 104

Sarma 1957: 104
1957
Loc

Carcharodon megalodon Agassiz. Sarma 1957 : 104

Sarma 1957: 104
1957
Loc

Carcharias (Prionodon) gangeticus Müller & Henle. Sarma 1957 : 104

Sarma 1957: 104
1957
Loc

Prionodon pagoda

Leriche 1954: 7
1954
Loc

Prionodon

Leriche 1954: 7
1954
Loc

Carchariolamna heroni

Hora 1939: 203
1939
Loc

Oxyrhina Agassiz. Hora 1939 : 206

Hora 1939: 206
1939
Loc

Prionodon Müller & Henle. Hora 1939 : 206

Hora 1939: 206
1939
Loc

Aprionodon Gill. Hora 1939 : 209

Hora 1939: 209
1939
Loc

Oxyrhina spallanzanii Bonaparte. Stuart 1910 : 294

Stuart 1910: 294
1910
Loc

Carcharias (Prionodon) collata Cope. Stuart 1910 : 296

Stuart 1910: 296
1910
Loc

Oxyrhina pagoda

Noetling 1901: 372
1901
Loc

Oxyrhina spallanzanii Bonaparte. Noetling 1901 : 372

Noetling 1901: 372
1901
Loc

Carcharias (Prionodon) gangeticus Müller & Henle. Noetling 1901 : 375

Noetling 1901: 375
1901
Loc

Carcharias (Prionodon)

Noetling 1895: 45
1895
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