Open Access
How to translate text using browser tools
14 July 2017 The occurrence of early Pleistocene marine fish remains from the Gulf Coast of Mobile County, Alabama, USA
Jun A. Ebersole, Sandy M. Ebersole, David J. Cicimurri
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

We examined 91 specimens recovered as beach wash on the shores of Dauphin Island and the nearby Sand/ Pelican Island Complex located in the northern Gulf of Mexico in Mobile County, Alabama, USA. A total of 12 unequivocal taxa were identified within our sample, including Carcharias taurus, Carcharodon carcharias, Cosmopolitodus hastalis, Carcharhinus leucas, Carcharhinus sp. cf. C. longimanus, Carcharhinus obscurus, Carcharhinus sp. cf. C. plumbeus, Negaprion brevirostris, Galeocerdo cuvier, Hemipristis serra, Aetobatus sp., and Diodontidae. Although not collected in situ, the preservation of the teeth, the biostratigraphic ranges of the taxa, and local stratigraphy suggests these fossils were derived from the shallow lower Pleistocene, Biloxi Formation and may be as young as Calabrian in age. Two extinct taxa in our sample, C. hastalis and H. serra, are among the stratigraphically youngest occurrences for each species. A comparison to extant representatives suggests this fossil assemblage preferred a warm, shallow, near-shore habitat with a water depth of 100 m or less. These fossils represent the first Quaternary marine vertebrates reported from Alabama.

Jun A. Ebersole, Sandy M. Ebersole, and David J. Cicimurri "The occurrence of early Pleistocene marine fish remains from the Gulf Coast of Mobile County, Alabama, USA," Palaeodiversity 10(1), 97-115, (14 July 2017). https://doi.org/10.18476/pale.v10.a6
Received: 10 April 2017; Accepted: 6 June 2017; Published: 14 July 2017
KEYWORDS
Chondrichthyes
Dauphin Island
Gulf of Mexico
North America
Osteichthyes
Sand/Pelican Island Complex
Back to Top