34 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



Mitchill described, in the Medical Repository, 8:77, an individual 

 measuring 13 feet and 1 inch, which was found, in 1803, on the 

 south side of Long Island. De Kay describes the species but 

 without mentioning any locality of its capture. His figure was 

 based on a female specimen/about 13 feet long, in the American 

 museum. 



At Woods Hole Mass, the thresher comes in April and remains 

 till late in the fall. It is common in Vineyard sound and is 

 found also in Buzzards bay. In the fall the boat fishermen, fish- 

 ing for cod at Gay Head, catch them with lines baited with 

 fresh herring. Individuals 20 feet long have been caught at 

 Menemsha. 



The shark feeds on mackerel, menhaden, herring and other 

 small fishes. 



Family CARCHARIDAE: 



Sand Sharks 







Genus CARCHARIAS Rafinesque 



Body moderately elongate; the snout pointed; mouth large, 

 crescentic; teeth long, narrow, awl-shaped, not serrated, most of 

 them witfr one or two small basal cusps ; spiracles minute, pore- 

 like; no nictitating membrane; gill openings in advance of the 

 pectorals, moderately large; dorsal fins nearly equal, not large, 

 the first well behind the pectorals; caudal well developed, with- 

 out keel, its basal lobe short, a notch near its tip; pectorals 

 short, not reaching to beginning of dorsal; size moderate. 



16 Carcharias littoralis (Mitchill) 

 Sand Shark 



Squalus littoralis MITCHILL, Am. Month. Mag. II, 328, 1818; LE SUEUK, 



Jour. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila, I, 224. 

 Carcharias littoralis DE KAY, N. Y. Fauna, Fishes, 351, 1842; JORDAN & 



EVERMANN, Bull. 47, U. S. Nat. Mus. 46, 1896; SMITH, Bull. TJ. S. F. C. 



XVII, 89, 1898. 



Eugom.phodus littoralis GILL, Proc. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila. 260, 1864. 

 Odontaspis americanus GUNTHER, Cat Fish. Brit. Mus. VIII, 392, 1870. 

 Carcharias aniericanus JORDAN & GILBERT, Bull. 16, U. S. Nat. Mus. 27, 



1883. 



Body moderately elongate, its greatest hight contained five 

 to six and one half times in the total length; head moderately 



