(top) and Carcharocles megalodon (bottom)|A. palatasi
was initially thought to be a morphotype of the giant thresher A. grandis'' (above). In 2002, rumors began about discoveries of a new type of large serrated
shark teeth pertaining to an undescribed species of
mackerel shark from
Miocene deposits in South Carolina by amateur collectors and fossil dealers. While these fossils were often dismissed as teeth from other sharks such as the
megalodon and the
false-toothed mako (
Parotodus benedenii), a consensus was reached that they were likely from a
morphotype of the giant thresher
Alopias grandis. Despite the large attention given by amateur collectors and fossil dealers, such fossils remained unmentioned in the scientific literature for many years. In 2014, a fossil dealer named Mark Palatas donated a single tooth to paleoichthyologist David Ward in hopes that it would spark a formal description. Ward subsequently initiated its research with his colleague Bretton Kent. The following year in October 2015, Ward and Kent presented a poster to the
Society of Vertebrate Paleontology reporting the existence of the new species. In 2018, the two published a formal paper giving it the scientific name
Alopias palatasi in honor of Palatas, and as a
sister species of
A. grandis. The two designated seven
type specimens from the collections of the
Calvert Marine Museum (CMM) and the
National Museum of Natural History (USNM). The
holotype is CMM-V-385, a right upper anterior tooth found in Bed 12 of the
Calvert Formation cliffs near
Parkers Creek. Six
paratypes were also designated: CMM-V-3876, a heavily worn tooth found at the beaches at the
Flag Ponds Nature Park that was reworked from either the
Choptank Formation or the Plum Point Member of the Calvert Formation; CMM-V-3981, a right upper lateral tooth collected from the beaches near Parkers Creek; CMM-V-4242, a tooth from the beaches of
Calvert County, Maryland; CMM-V-5823, a left lower lateral tooth and the tooth that Palatas donated, which he found in the downstream of the May River, South Carolina; USNM 411148, a tooth also found in Bed 12 of the Calvert Formation cliffs near Parkers Creek; and USNM 639783, a tooth also collected from the beaches near Parkers Creek. ==Description==