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Selachian faunas from the lowermost Cretaceous Purbeck Group of Dorset, southern England

Underwood, CJ and Rees, Jan LU (2002) p.83-101
Abstract
Abundant selachian remains have been recovered from a number of horizons through the Purbeck Group at Durlston Bay, Lulworth Cove and Stair Hole in southern England. The remains, primarily teeth, but additionally fin spines and dermal denticles, belong to selachians from two major groups, Hybodontoidea and Rhinobatoidei. The assemblage of hybodont sharks is quite diverse, comprising six species from the four genera `Hybodus', Egertonodus, Polyacrodus and Lonchidion. The rhinobatoid rays include two species, one belonging to the genus Belemnobatis and another, larger, indeterminate ray. Within the Purbeck fauna, two species are new: Lonchidion inflexum sp. nov. and Belemnobatis variabilis sp. nov. Within the entirely non-marine succession... (More)
Abundant selachian remains have been recovered from a number of horizons through the Purbeck Group at Durlston Bay, Lulworth Cove and Stair Hole in southern England. The remains, primarily teeth, but additionally fin spines and dermal denticles, belong to selachians from two major groups, Hybodontoidea and Rhinobatoidei. The assemblage of hybodont sharks is quite diverse, comprising six species from the four genera `Hybodus', Egertonodus, Polyacrodus and Lonchidion. The rhinobatoid rays include two species, one belonging to the genus Belemnobatis and another, larger, indeterminate ray. Within the Purbeck fauna, two species are new: Lonchidion inflexum sp. nov. and Belemnobatis variabilis sp. nov. Within the entirely non-marine succession of the Purbeck Group, the beds containing ray teeth also contain molluscs indicative of more saline intervals. In all of the sampled beds, the hybodont faunas recovered were relatively homogenous. (Less)
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author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Purbeck, Hybodus, Belemnobatis, Lonchidion, Dorset, shark, ray
host publication
Life and Environments in Purbeck Times (Special Papers in Palaeontology )
issue
68
pages
83 - 101
publisher
Paleontological Association
external identifiers
  • wos:000189467700007
  • scopus:0003305386
ISSN
0038-6804
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
95b47f89-2a3c-47d5-88ba-203acc3726d6 (old id 280903)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 16:45:06
date last changed
2022-02-27 23:22:34
@inbook{95b47f89-2a3c-47d5-88ba-203acc3726d6,
  abstract     = {{Abundant selachian remains have been recovered from a number of horizons through the Purbeck Group at Durlston Bay, Lulworth Cove and Stair Hole in southern England. The remains, primarily teeth, but additionally fin spines and dermal denticles, belong to selachians from two major groups, Hybodontoidea and Rhinobatoidei. The assemblage of hybodont sharks is quite diverse, comprising six species from the four genera `Hybodus', Egertonodus, Polyacrodus and Lonchidion. The rhinobatoid rays include two species, one belonging to the genus Belemnobatis and another, larger, indeterminate ray. Within the Purbeck fauna, two species are new: Lonchidion inflexum sp. nov. and Belemnobatis variabilis sp. nov. Within the entirely non-marine succession of the Purbeck Group, the beds containing ray teeth also contain molluscs indicative of more saline intervals. In all of the sampled beds, the hybodont faunas recovered were relatively homogenous.}},
  author       = {{Underwood, CJ and Rees, Jan}},
  booktitle    = {{Life and Environments in Purbeck Times (Special Papers in Palaeontology )}},
  issn         = {{0038-6804}},
  keywords     = {{Purbeck; Hybodus; Belemnobatis; Lonchidion; Dorset; shark; ray}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{68}},
  pages        = {{83--101}},
  publisher    = {{Paleontological Association}},
  title        = {{Selachian faunas from the lowermost Cretaceous Purbeck Group of Dorset, southern England}},
  year         = {{2002}},
}