Fossillised Phcnodonidae Gyrodus Jaw Fragment With Teeth

Item Description

Lower Jurassic to Early Cretaceous Period – 201 – 145 million years ago

Name of which the family belongs: Phcnodonidae
Order to which the fossil belongs: Pycnodontiformes
Informal name of the fossil: Pycnodont

A section of jaw fragment with teeth from the Phcnodonidae Gyrodus.
The Gyrodus was a very deep-bodied fish and with a circular outline. Its dorsal and anal fins were symmetrically placed with a deeply notched tail fin. The Gyrodus, known as boney fish, had deep, rectangular scales which covered the body surface and densely packed, rounded teeth, suggesting it may have had a diet of coral or other hard- bodied prey.

Nice preserved piece.

Size: Matrix: W: 70mm x H: 52mm x D: 20mm
Jaw: L: 30mm x W: 16mm

SKU: DEN-T554

£18.00

1 Available