Spiny Shark Fossils Discovered In Spain Date Back 408 Million Years, Scientists Say

Strange Fish Fossils Unearthed In Mountain Region
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The fossilized remains of a 408-million-year-old fish species have been found in Spain, a study reports.

Researchers found scales, spines and shoulder bones of the new species (Machaeracanthus goujeti) in the town of Teruel and to the south of the city of Zaragoza. The fish lived during the Devonian period, and is a spiny shark (Acanthodii), an extinct type of fish that resembles both sharks and bony fish.

The discovery "expands our knowledge of the biodiversity that existed on the peninsula 408 million years ago, when the modern-day region of Teruel was covered by the sea," study researcher Héctor Botella, a paleontologist at the University of Valencia, Spain, said in a statement.

Little is known about the spiny sharks, other than that they only lived during the Palaeozoic Era (540 million to 250 million years ago) and really blossomed during the Devonian period (420 million to 360 million years ago).

But bones in the spiny shark group usually grow differently than the ones found here, suggesting the new species might be even more like sharks and arose during the diversification of jawed vertebrates.

Most of the fossil samples were from juveniles. The researchers estimate the biggest of these fish would have been less than a meter (3.3 feet) long.

The fossils were found in sediment layers in the Iberian mountains. They were probably from fish that lived in a large but shallow saltwater body of water known as an epicontinental sea, the researchers say, which might have served as a breeding ground. Larger fossils were found in lower sediment layers.

The researchers also analyzed fossils from the Lower Devonian period in northern Spain and western France, which were first thought to come from the Machaeracanthus species.

The new fossils are now kept in the Paleontology Museum of Zaragoza, Spain. The findings were reported in the December 2012 issue of the journal Geodiversitas.

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Before You Go

Extinct Prehistoric Animals
Titanis walleri(01 of09)
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This North American bird, which stood over 8 feet tall, would have had an enormous, axe-like beak. (credit:Dmitry Bogdanov / Creative Commons)
Dunkleosteus terreli(02 of09)
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This heavily-armored predator had the second most powerful bite of any fish. (credit:Nobu Tamura / Wikimedia Commons)
Indricotherium(03 of09)
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The hornless rhinoceros-like creatures of this genus were the largest land mammals of all time. (credit:Dmitry Bogdanov / Creative Commons)
Megatherium(04 of09)
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Giant ground sloths of this genus were about the size of today's elephants. The megatherium only went extinct around 10,000 years ago (right around the time when humans started farming), and smaller relatives may have survived as late as the 16th century! (credit:Dmitry Bogdanov / Creative Commons)
Dinornis novaezealandiae(05 of09)
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Richard Owen, director of London's Museum of Natural History, stands next to the largest of all moa. Moa, which originated in New Zealand, were flightless, and some were even wingless. (credit:John van Voorst)
Argentavis magnificens(06 of09)
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The Argentavis magnificens, an early relative of the Andean Condor, was the largest flying bird ever discovered. (credit:Stanton F. Fink / Creative Commons)
Diprotodon optatum(07 of09)
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These creatures, the largest marsupials that ever lived, roamed Australia. Some scientists have suggested that stories of the supernatural 'bunyip' creature in Aboriginal folklore could be based on diprotodonts. (credit:Dmitry Bogdanov / Creative Commons)
Deinotherium giganteum(08 of09)
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These distant relatives of modern elephants had an imposing appearance, with strange, downward-curving tusks and heights of up to 16 feet at the shoulder. (credit:Dmitry Bogdanov / Creative Commons)
Leedsichthys problematicus & Liopleurodon rossicus(09 of09)
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The fearsome Liopleuredon, right, had a jaw nearly ten feet long. The Leedsichthys, left, was a bony fish that may have been even larger than it looked; some estimates put its maximum length at 53 feet.Correction: An earlier version of this slide had the positions of the Liopleuredon and Leedsichthys reversed. (credit:Dmitry Bogdanov / Creative Commons)