Rhynchobatus cf. vincenti Jaekel, 1894
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.26879/1085 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B6B8E985-F1CF-4C10-BB00-602E5BF36C1C |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BA87C1-FFD7-FFC0-C2AB-E1FDC811B72C |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Rhynchobatus cf. vincenti Jaekel, 1894 |
status |
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Rhynchobatus cf. vincenti Jaekel, 1894
Figure 10 View FIGURE 10 F-G
2016 Rhynchobatus sp. ; Merzeraud et al., p. 14-15, tab. 1.
Material. More than 100 oral teeth from the KEB- 1
locality, Souar-Fortuna formations, Djebel el Kébar,
Tunisia, and includes the figured specimens KEB
1-176, 1-177 ( Figure 10 View FIGURE 10 F-G).
Description
Teeth are medium to large sized, reaching more than 3 mm long. The ornamentation of the lingual face, when the latter is not totally abraded by functional wear, is extremely variable, being usually smooth ( Figure 10G View FIGURE 10 ) or having fine enameloid pitting under the transverse keel ( Figure 10F View FIGURE 10 1 View FIGURE 1 ).
Remarks
Relatively common in most of the Eocene elasmobranch associations, Rhynchobatus displays a tooth morphology particularly conservative, explaining why only three worldwide species are recognised in the fossil record, the Neogene Rhynchobatus pristinus (Probst 1877) and Rhynchobatus rudolffischeri Laurito Mora, 1999 , and the Paleogene Rhynchobatus vincenti Jaekel 1894 . The latter probably corresponds to the frequent species with pitted enameloid occurring along the Fayum series from MI to BQ (Underwood et al., 2011) and often attributed or affiliated to R. vincenti in the Eocene of Tethysian realm (e.g., Cappetta, 2012; Ward and Wiest, 1990; Averianov and Udovinchenko, 1993; Mustafa and Zalmout, 2002; Tabuce et al., 2005; Strougo et al., 2007).
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