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 Ebersole, Jun A. Cicimurri, David J. Stringer, Gary L. European Journal of Taxonomy 2019 2019-12-06 585 1 274    Gen. et sp. indet.   Fig. 67    Material examined   UNITED STATES OF AMERICA–  Alabama• 1 isolated tooth; Claiborne Group;  MSC2402.    Description Teeth anteroposteriorly longer than wide, laterally compressed covered with thick enameloid. Anterior half of tooth wider than posterior half, resulting in pear-shaped occlusal outline. Indistinct cusp located anteriorly, posterior margin slopes towards edge of tooth. Blunt transverse ridge extends across cusp; cusp conspicuously lighter in color than remainder of tooth. Lateral surfaces of crown convex, exhibiting fine growth lines. Basal face rounded.    Remarks MSC 2402 ( Fig. 67) appears to be conspecific with teeth belonging to the Balistidaeas described by Tyler (1980)and Tyler & Santini (2002). Tyler & Santini (2002)noted that isolated teeth and jaw fragments have little taxonomic value because the majority of differential characteristics among the described fossil taxa are based on complete specimens, not isolated teeth. The only reported Eocene member of the Balistidae,  Gornylistes prodigiosus Bannikov & Tyler, 2008, was described from a nearly complete specimen from the middle Eocene of the Caucasus. Although the typedescription for this specimen mentions the number of teeth in the jaws, the tooth morphologies were not described nor were they illustrated. The teeth of Balistidaeare superficially similar to the pharyngeal teeth of the Eocene fish  Eotrigonodon. However, teeth of Balistidaeteeth differ by having convex lateral edges, as opposed to being mesiodistally compressed with flat lateral edges on the teeth of  Eotrigonodon(see Ciobanu 2011: figs 5–10). Furthermore, the crown of  Eotrigonodonteeth has smooth enameloid that lacks transverse growth lines, which are visible on the teeth of Balistidae.   Fig. 67. Balistidae Risso, 1810, tooth. A–D. MSC2402, Gosport Sand. A. Profile view. B. Basal view. C. Oral view. D. Anterior view. Anterior at left in A–C. Scale bar = 5 mm.   Stratigraphic and geographic range in Alabama The lone specimen in our sample was collected from the Gosport Sand at site ACh-21. Middle Bartonian, Zone NP17. [189,1301,2000,2027] MSC United States of America Claiborne Group 179 180 MSC 2402 1 Alabama