Hexanchus microdon (Agassiz, 1835)

Adolfssen, Jan S. & Ward, David J., 2015, Neoselachians from the Danian (early Paleocene) of Denmark, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 60 (2), pp. 313-338 : 316-318

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.2012.0123

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C45E8796-697E-1977-FC91-3D3DFCE2B4FD

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Hexanchus microdon (Agassiz, 1835)
status

 

Hexanchus microdon (Agassiz, 1835)

Fig. 2H, I.

1835–44 Notidanus microdon sp. nov.; Agassiz 1835: 3, pl. 27: 1; 1843: 222; 1844: pl. 36: 1, 2.

1952 Notidanus ( Hexanchus View in CoL ?) microdon Agassiz ; Arambourg 1952: 40, pl. 1: 1–55.

1977 Notidanus ( Hexanchus View in CoL ?) microdon Agassiz ; Herman 1977: 98,

pl. 3: 7.

2002 Hexanchus microdon (Agassiz) ; Antunes and Cappetta 2002: 108, pl. 4: 3, 4.

Material.—Three almost complete upper jaw teeth ( MGUH 29825, MGUH 29826, GMV 2012-58) and two fragmentary teeth from the lower jaw collected from the Ce in Stevns gual (C 2) views. D–G. Sphenodus lundgreni ( Davis, 1890) . D. MGUH1406 View Materials , holotype (Br2) anterior lateral tooth in labial (D 1), lingual (D 2), and distal (D 3) views, with magnification of folds (D 4, D 5, respectively). E . MGUH 29822 View Materials (Br2) anterior tooth in labial (E 1), lingual (E 2), and distal (E 3) views. F . MGUH 29823 View Materials (Br2) lateral tooth in labial (F 1), lingual (F 2), and mesial (F 3) views. G . MGUH 29824 View Materials (Br2) rare posterior tooth in labial (G 1), lingual (G 2), and mesial (G 3) views. H, I. Hexanchus microdon (Agassiz, 1843) . H . MGUH 29825 View Materials (Ce) fragment from a lower jaw tooth. I . MGUH 29826 View Materials (Ce) fragment from an upper jaw tooth in lingual view. J. Gladioserratus sp ., MGUH 29827 View Materials (Br2) in lingual view. K, L. Heptranchias howelli Reed, 1946 . K . OESM-10046-14 (Br2) lower jaw tooth in labial (K 1) and lingual (K 2) views. L . OESM-10046-15 (Br2) upper jaw tooth in labial view. M. Notidanodon brotzeni Siverson, 1995 , MGUH 1399 View Materials (Br2) crown of tooth .

Kridtbrud. Incomplete teeth of Hexanchus are common in the Faxe quarry (Br2).

Description.—The dentition in Hexanchus is both monognathic disjunct, dignathic and gynandric heterodont. Teeth from the upper jaw are strongly labio-lingually compressed with a prominent main cusp that is slightly inclined towards the commissure, with a flat labial face and a convex lingual face. The mesial cutting edge of the main cusp is only partly preserved, but fine serration is visible. A single low distal cusplet is present and strongly inclined towards the commissure. The distal end of the tooth is missing, so it is unclear whether there was a second distal cusp or not. The root is high and wide and labio-lingually compressed.

Teeth from the lower jaw are strongly labio-lingually compressed with a distally inclined main cusp. The main cusp is serrated on the lower of its half mesial cutting edge and is either straight or slightly sigmoid mesially on the upper half. The distal cutting edge is convex. The distal cusplets are distally inclined with convex mesial and distal cutting edges. The maximal number of distal cusplets observed was five, but it was in a broken specimen with clear signs of having had more.

Remarks.—The teeth are not well preserved but do not differ significantly from those referred to H. microdon from the Late Cretaceous chalks and from the Fiskeler. Of the two Recent species, H. griseus ( Bonnaterre, 1788) and H. nakamurai Teng, 1962 ), the dentition of H. microdon closely resembles those of H. nakamurai in having lower teeth with lower crowns making them relatively wider than those of H. griseus Herman, Hovestadt-Euler, Hovestadt, and Stehmann, 1994 ). The name H. microdon is problematic as it is applied to almost any H. nakamurai- like Hexanchus from the Late Cretaceous and early Paleogene. In particular, in Morocco it is conventionally used for all Hexanchus specimens in the Maastrichtian, Paleocene, and early Eocene, whereas in NW Europe it is restricted to the Cretaceous and H. agassizi is used for Paleocene and early Eocene specimens. A revision is required but it is beyond the scope of this paper. Teeth of H. agassizi , as the name is currently used, differ from those of H. microdon by their smaller size. H. microdon differs from H. gracilis ( Davis, 1887) mainly in having more distal cusplets, up to ten in H. microdon versus up to six in H. gracilis ( Cappetta 1980) . All these differences could be due to a combination of ontogenetic and sexual dimorphism.

Stratigraphic and geographic range.—Maastrichtian in northern Europe to the Ypresian in Morocco ( Cappetta 1980, 1987).

MGUH

Museum Geologicum Universitatis Hafniensis

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Elasmobranchii

Order

Hexanchiformes

Family

Hexanchidae

Genus

Hexanchus

Loc

Hexanchus microdon (Agassiz, 1835)

Adolfssen, Jan S. & Ward, David J. 2015
2015
Loc

Hexanchus microdon (Agassiz)

Antunes, M. T. & Cappetta, H. 2002: 108
2002
Loc

Notidanus

Arambourg, C. 1952: 40
1952
Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF