Jawless Creature Had the World's Sharpest Teeth 53
ananyo writes "An extinct primitive marine vertebrate had the sharpest dental structures ever known — with tips just one-twentieth of the width of a human hair, but able to apply pressures that could compete easily with those from human jaws. The razor-sharp teeth belonged to conodonts, jawless vertebrates that evolved some 500 million years ago in the Precambrian eon and went extinct during the Triassic period, around 200 million years ago. The creatures roamed the planet for longer than any other vertebrate so far–– and despite their lack of jaws, they were the first creatures to evolve teeth (abstract)."
Freaky Beasties (Score:5, Interesting)
Here [le.ac.uk] are some speculative drawings of the creatures. Getting caught in a swarm of thrashing sharp dental structures would make a good horror film.
Re:Hagfish (Score:4, Interesting)
Everything is related, it is a question of how closely. Seems some taxonomies put them near the hagfish class and the lamprey class, however a 2010 paper argues they are not Vertebrata at all, or even Craniata.