Abstract:
The fish remains, including 104 species from 52 families, collected at the Lee Creek Mine near Aurora, Beaufort County, North
Carolina, constitute the largest fossil marine fish assemblages
known from the Coastal Plain of the eastern United States. The
fish faunas came principally from the Pungo River Formation
(Burdigalian, planktonic foraminifera zones N6-7) and the Yorktown Formation (Zanclian, planktonic foraminifera zone N18 and
younger). A few specimens were obtained from the James City
Formation (early-middle Pleistocene).
As an assemblage, the fishes found in the Pungo River Formation, including 44 species of selachians and 10 species of teleosts,
are most similar to those from the “Muschelsandstein” of the
Swiss Molasse.
The Yorktown Formation fish assemblage includes 37 species of
selachians and 40 species of teleosts, derived mostly from the base
of the Sunken Meadow Member.
Although the Pungo River Formation fish fauna is dominated by
warm-water (18°-25°C) taxa, the Yorktown Formation fossil fish
fauna includes warm and cool water species. Both fish assemblages occur with a cool-temperate invertebrate fauna.
The abundant remains in both faunas permit us to make the following interpretations concerning shark taxonomy. We reassign
Megascyliorhinus to the family Parascyllidae and Parotodus benedenii (Le Hon) to the Lamnidae. Among the mako sharks, we designate the lectotype of Isurus desori (Agassiz) and synonymize it
with 7. oxyrinchus Rafinesque and separate Isurus xiphodon
(Agassiz) from I. hastalis (Agassiz). Palaeocarcharodon, Procarcharodon, Megaselachus, and Carcharocles are synonymized with
Carcharodon. Sphyrna laevissima (Cope) is synonymized with S.
zygaena (Linnaeus), and Galeocerdo triqueter Cope is synonymized with Alopias cf. A. vulpinus (Bonnaterre).
This fauna produced four new records and two new species.
Among the selachians, we note the first records of Megascyliorhinus, Rhincodon, Megachasma, and Isistius from the Atlantic
Coastal Plain, and among the bony fishes, the first occurrences in
the fossil record of Caulolatilus and Pomatomus. We also describe
two new species of bony fishes, Lopholatilus rayus and Pagrus
hyneus.
Citation:
Purdy, Robert W., Schneider, Vincent P., Applegate, Shelton P., McLellan, Jack H., Meyer, Robert L., and Slaughter, Bob H. 2001. "
The Neogene Sharks, Rays, and Bony Fishes from Lee Creek Mine, Aurora, North Carolina." In
Geology and Paleontology of the Lee Creek Mine, North Carolina, III. 71–202. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. In
Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology, 90.
https://doi.org/10.5479/si.00810266.90.71.