This fish was quite small, only getting to around 25–30 cm or 10-12 inches long. This is about as big as some of the smallest sharks around today, like the
pygmy lanternshark.
Falcatus was a chondrichthyan known as a "
cladodont-toothed stethacanthid
holocephalan". The first material known from the genus were the prominent fin spines that curve anteriorly over the head of the animal. When first described in 1883 from the
St. Louis Limestone, these remains were given the name
Physonemus falcatus. However, in 1985, fossils of a new type of chondrichthyan from
Montana were described that displayed a high degree of
sexual dimorphism. The same spines that were previously named
P. falcatus were found on one of the morphs, identified as the male due to the presence of
valvae. ==Classification==