Two Squalicorax falcatus feast on the remains of a dead juvenile Tylosaurus. |
Squalicorax would have looked like a modern Gray Reef Shark, or possibly a Great White Shark, at a glance when alive. It had a streamlined body, long triangular pectoral fins, and a tall dorsal fin. However, its teeth were more similar to those of a modern Tiger Shark's, being shallow, finely serrated, and slightly curved to the side. This means Squalicorax was adapted to cutting and gnawing at its food, an adaptation seen in sharks that frequently scavenge. This is backed up by the fact that Squalicorax teeth marks have been found in the bones of other animals that would have been too large for it to have hunted. Even entire Squalicorax teeth have been found embedded in some of these bones. Fossil animals that this shark scavenged from include turtles, large fish, mosasaurs, and even a duck-billed dinosaur, which had probably died in a riverbed and washed out to sea. Of course, there is no reason to assume Squalicorax only scavenged and never hunted live prey, too. Most modern sharks, including all the species Squalicorax shares resemblance with, will hunt or scavenge depending on what food is available to them.
Sharks, as you may already know, possess a skeleton that is almost entirely made of cartilage. This soft tissue does not preserve well and hardly ever fossilizes. Because of this, many prehistoric sharks are only known from teeth and jaws, leading experts to only hypothesize as to what they looked like by comparing their teeth to those of modern sharks. Not the case with Squalicorax! A wonderfully preserved fossil from this shark was unearthed in what is now Kansas that includes a fully fossilized head, spine, and pectoral fins!
Wonderfully preserved Squalicorax skeleton on display at the National Musuem in Washington D.C. |
That is all for this week! As always leave comments below! Special thanks to paleontologist, Nathan VanVranken for his insight during the making of this article and life reconstruction above.
References
David R. Schwimmer, J. D. Stewart and G. Dent Williams. Scavenging by Sharks of the Genus Squalicorax in the Late Cretaceous of North America. PALAIOS Vol. 12, No. 1 (Feb., 1997), pp. 71-83