Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Xenacanthus

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Class
  
Chondrichthyes

Order
  
Xenacanthida

Rank
  
Genus

Phylum
  
Chordata

Subclass
  
Elasmobranchii

Family
  
Xenacanthidae

Xenacanthus wwwprehistoricwildlifecomimagesspeciesxxena

Similar
  
Cladoselache, Orthacanthus, Xenacanthida, Stethacanthus, Hybodus

Xenacanthus is a genus of prehistoric sharks. The first species of the genus lived in the later Devonian period, and they survived until the end of the Triassic, 202 million years ago. Fossils of various species have been found worldwide.

Contents

Xenacanthus Xenacanthus

Xenacanthus had a number of features that distinguished it from modern sharks. This freshwater shark was about one meter (three feet) in length. The dorsal fin was ribbonlike and ran the entire length of the back and round the tail, where it joined with the anal fin. This arrangement resembles that of modern conger eels, and Xenacanthus probably swam in a similar manner. A distinctive spine projected from the back of the head and gave the genus its name. The teeth had an unusual "V" shape, and it probably fed on small crustaceans and heavily scaled palaeoniscid fishes.

Xenacanthus Xenacanthus spp

As with all fossil sharks, Xenacanthus is mainly known because of fossilised teeth and spines.

Species

Xenacanthus Xenacanthus Sharks Photograph by Christian Darkin

  • Xenacanthus atriossis
  • Xenacanthus compressus
  • Xenacanthus decheni
  • Xenacanthus denticulatus
  • Xenacanthus erectus
  • Xenacanthus gibbosus
  • Xenacanthus gracilis
  • Xenacanthus howsei
  • Xenacanthus laevissimus
  • Xenacanthus latus
  • Xenacanthus luedernesis
  • Xenacanthus moorei
  • Xenacanthus ossiani
  • Xenacanthus ovalis
  • Xenacanthus parallelus
  • Xenacanthus parvidens
  • Xenacanthus robustus
  • Xenacanthus serratus
  • Xenacanthus slaughteri
  • Xenacanthus taylori
  • Xenacanthus Xenacanthus decheni prehistoric sharks Stock Image C0217499

    Xenacathus was shown in the forty-third episode of River Monsters, labeled "Prehistoric Terror", wherein it was nicknamed the "eel shark" (which also occasionally is a name used for the frilled shark). The show's host, Jeremy Wade, goes into an in-depth investigation into the habits of the animal, revealing its probable nature as an ambush predator that hunted in fresh water.

    Xenacanthus Xenacanthus Wikipedia

    Xenacanthus Xenacanthus Wikipedia

    References

    Xenacanthus Wikipedia