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    What's this?
Ancient sea predator used toothy spiral jaw to get an edge
When Helicoprion bit down on prey, the tooth whorl would have sliced and diced the meal and moved it down toward the throat.

By

Stephanie Pappas, LiveScience
Wed, Feb 27 2013 at 4:18 PM

Related Topics:

Animal Research, Research & Innovation, Science, Wild Animals
Helicoprion
An artist's conception of Helicoprion's bizarre spiral jaw. (Image: Ray Troll)
 
An ancient sea predator had a spiraling whorl of teeth that acted as a lethal slicing tool, according to new scans of a mysterious fossil.
 
Helicoprion was a bizarre creature that went extinct some 225 million years ago. Like modern-day sharks, Helicoprion had cartilaginous bones rather than calcified ones, so the only traces it left in the fossil record were weird, whorl-like spirals of teeth that look quite unlike anything sharks sport today.
 
The dearth of fossil evidence has led to multiple attempted reconstructions of what Helicoprion would have looked like. In some, the tooth whorl is placed on the upper jaw, curling outward like a spiky elephant trunk. In others, it's on the lower lip, giving the fish a fearsomely pouty expression. Researchers have also debated whether Helicoprion was more like a modern shark or another ancient group of cartilaginous fish, the chimaera. [25 Amazing Ancient Beasts]
 
Now, a team of researchers from led by Leif Tapanila of Idaho State University has scanned a tooth whorl fossil from the Idaho Museum of Natural History using computed tomography (CT), the same type of technology used for disease screening in medicine. This technique provides a more detailed look than ever before at the tooth whorl, revealing the only way the whorl would've fit into the creature's mouth is if it took up Helicoprion's entire lower jaw and grew continuously in a spiral, curling under itself like a conveyer belt of teeth. Previous reconstructions pictured the spiral as an appendage on the tip of the jaw, the researchers wrote Tuesday (Feb. 26) in the journal Biology Letters.
 
The scanned specimen, found in Idaho in 1950, dates back about 270 million years. It's about 9 inches (23 cm) in diameter, about half the size of the largest tooth whorls ever found. For comparison, the diameter of a regulation men's basketball is just over 9 inches.
 
When Helicoprion bit down on prey, the tooth whorl would have been forced backward, slicing and dicing the meal and moving it down toward the throat. Few Helicoprion fossils show signs of tooth breakage, suggesting that the fish likely ate soft-bodied animals such as squid.
 
The anatomy of the jaw also confirms that Helicoprion belonged to a group called the Euchondrocephali, a Greek word meaning "three cartilaginous heads," for the way their jaws fuse. These fish share characteristics of both cartilaginous sharks and bony fishes. That makes Helicoprion a distant relative of today's rabbitfish, ratfish and other chimaeras.
 
Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas or LiveScience @livescience. We're also on Facebook & Google+.
 
Related on LiveScience and MNN:
  • Image Gallery: Ancient Monsters of the Sea
  • Dangers in the Deep: 10 Scariest Sea Creatures
  • T-Rex of the Seas: A Mosasaur Gallery
  • MNN: 'Predator X': Ancient Nessie-like sea monster gets official name
This story was originally written for LiveScience and was republished with permission here. Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company.

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