Onchopristis is an extinct genus of sclerorhynchoid from the Cretaceous of North Africa, Europe, and North America. Its name is derived from the Ancient Greek ónkos (ὄγκος, 'barb') and prístis (πρίστις, 'saw' or 'sawfish'). It contains two valid species, O. numida and O. dunklei, though some researchers argue that both may be considered a single taxon with variation in morphology caused by a wide geographical range. Specimens of Onchopristis have been discovered in coastal and fluvial deposits dated from the Barremian to the Maastrichtian ages (~125.77-66.0 mya), making this genus one of the oldest and longest-lived sclerorhynchoid genera.
Specimens of O. numida, IPUW 353500 and IGR 2818, suggest a length estimate of and, respectively; such individuals would have weighed . Like other sclerorhynchoids, it had a long rostrum with large denticles similar to sawfishes and sawsharks. This feature was convergently evolved and its closest living relatives are actually skates. Isolated rostral denticles are the most common fossils of Onchopristis, but rostra, chondrocrania, jaws, oral teeth, vertebrae, and dermal denticles have also been found.[1] An isolated fish vertebra, tentatively referred to Onchopristis, has been associated with the tooth alveolus of a possible specimen of Spinosaurus (MSNM V 4047).[2] Similarly, the dentary fragment of Spinosaurus aegyptiacus, MPDM 31, is associated with the rostral tooth of Onchopristis.[3]
Gigantichthys numidus was named by Émile Haug in 1905 for fragmentary rostral denticles from the Continental intercalaire of Algeria. Haug also named Platyspondylus foureaui for vertebrae from the same formation. Articulated specimens have confirmed that the rostral denticles and vertebrae belong to the same species.[1] In 1917, Ernst Stromer named the new genus Onchopristis with "G". numidus as the type species. Although the spelling "Onchopristis numidus" is commonly used, it is grammatically incorrect and has been emended to O. numida.[4]
Oral teeth from the Bahariya Formation of Egypt were named Squatina aegyptiaca by Stromer in 1927, and were later renamed as the separate genus Sechmetia by Christa Werner in 1989. Again, articulated specimens confirmed that these teeth belong to O. numida.[1] In 1935, Wilhelm Weiler named Peyeria libyca for what he thought were sawfish rostral denticles from the Bahariya Formation. An associated specimen of Ischyrhiza mira, a close relative of Onchopristis, indicates that "Peyeria" are actually dermal denticles from O. numida.[5]
A second valid species from the Woodbine Formation of Texas, Onchopristis dunklei, was named by Charles McNulty, Jr. and Bob Slaughter in 1962. O. dunklei is also known from the Cenomanian of Spain and France, and from the Albian of Tunisia based on incomplete material. In 1971, John Thurmond named the subspecies O. dunklei praecursor, but it is probably not distinct from O. dunklei.[6] Rostral denticles from New Zealand formerly referred to "O. d. praecursor" have been reassigned to their own genus and species, Australopristis wiffeni.[7] [8] An uncritical summary of 70 vertebrate taxa found in the Aguja Formation reports the presence of O. dunklei based on two fragmentary specimens, though the authors acknowledge the skepticism regarding the Campanian-Maastrichtian occurrence of this genus.[9] Subsequent studies have identified these specimens as Columbusia deblieuxi.[10] [11] In 2024, four fragmentary rostral teeth and an exceptionally large, 1.46m (04.79feet) long rostrum of Onchopristis sp. was reported from the Dakhla Formation of Egypt, extending the known fossil range of this genus from the Barremian-Cenomanian age to the Maastrichtian age.[12]