Eosqualiolus

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Eosqualiolus
Temporal range: Eocene-Miocene
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Chondrichthyes
Superorder: Selachimorpha
Order: Squaliformes
Family: Dalatiidae
Genus: Eosqualiolus
Adnet, 2006

Eosqualiolus is an extinct genus of sharks in the family Dalatiidae. It was described by Sylvain Adnet in 2006, and the type species is E. aturensis, which existed during the middle Eocene of what is now France.[1] A new species, E. skrovinai, which existed in what is now Slovakia during the Miocene period, was described by Charlie J. Underwood and Jan Schlogl in 2012, and named in honour of Michal Škrovina. E. skrovinai was described from 14 fossil teeth found in the ; 9 upper and 5 lower, some of which were partial and some were complete.[2]

Species[]

  • Eosqualiolus aturensis Adnet, 2006
  • Eosqualiolus skrovinai Underwood & Schlogl, 2012

References[]

  1. ^ Sylvain Adnet, 2006. Two new selachian associations (Elasmobranchii, Neoselachii) from the Middle Eocene of Landes (South-west of France). Implication for the knowledge of deep-water selachian communities. Abstract
  2. ^ Charlie J. Underwood and Jan Schlogl (2011). "Deep water chondrichthyans from the Early Miocene of the Vienna Basin (Central Paratethys, Slovakia)". Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. in press. doi:10.4202/app.2011.0101.
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