Anthracobune pinfoldi, Pilgrim, 1940

Tabuce, Rodolphe, Delmer, Cyrille & Gheerbrant, Emmanuel, 2007, Evolution of the tooth enamel microstructure in the earliest proboscideans (Mammalia), Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 149 (4), pp. 611-628 : 621

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1111/j.1096-3642.2007.00272.x

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/557487D0-F77F-FF96-FEFE-FD8BFE2FFB0C

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Anthracobune pinfoldi
status

 

ANTHRACOBUNE PINFOLDI

In a vertical section of a P4 tooth, the enamel thickness is around 670 µm; the Schmelzmuster is twolayered. The inner zone is composed of radial enamel. The large outer zone, which represents 75% of the entire enamel thickness, presents a peculiar organization in which the prisms are parallel with each other but are not rectilinear, and they present undulations of great amplitudes. In some areas, undulations are so pronounced that decussations of bundles of prisms appear. On a horizontal section of the same specimen, the diameter of the prisms is around 5.5–7 µm in the inner zone; their cross sections are arc-shaped in outline. Near the OES, closed circles within hexagonal structures are visible ( Fig. 6C View Figure 6 ); these structures are typical of poorly mineralized areas of the outer zone where prisms disappear in the IPM. The hexagons represent the area of one ameloblast, and the central circles may represent the trace of Tomes’ process. Reif (1974), Sahni & Koenigswald (1997), and Tabuce, Vianey-Liaud & Garcia (2004) observed the same structures in carnivores, extant dolphin, and Cretaceous mammal, respectively.

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