The genus contains several Late Jurassic species known from well preserved full body remains, which show that it differs from the living bullhead sharks in the placement of the pelvic girdle and fins, as well as by having a shorter skull.[7][8]
Taxonomy
Recent studies have classified it into its own family, Paracestracionidae.[7]
^ abZittel, K. A., (1911): Grundzüge der Paläontologie (Paläozoologie). Neubearbeitet von F. Broili, E. Koken, M. Schlosser. II. Abteilung. Vertebrata. Oldenbourg 1911. Zweite vermehrte und verbesserte Auflage. Gr.8°. VII, 598 S.
^ abC. J. Underwood and D. J. Ward. (2004). Neoselachian sharks and rays from the British Bathonian (Middle Jurassic). Palaeontology 47(3):447-501
^ abcD. Thies. (1983). (Jurassic neoselachians from Germany and S[outh]-England). Courier Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg 58:1-116 [in German]
^ abJ. Kriwet. (2008). A new species of extinct bullhead sharks, Paracestracion viohli sp. nov. (Neoselachii, Heterodontiformes), from the Upper Jurassic of South Germany. Acta Geologica Polonica 58(2):235-241
^ abcWagner, J. A. (1857) Characteristics of new species of cartilage fish from the lithographic slates of the Solnhofen area. Gelehrte Anzeigen der königlich bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 44 (35,36): 288–293 [in German]
^Arrati, G (2000), "Remarkable teleostean fishes from the Late Jurassic of southern Germany and their phylogenetic relationships", Mitteilungen aus dem Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin, Geowissenschaften Reihe, 3 (1): 137–179, Bibcode:2000FossR...3..137A, doi:10.5194/fr-3-137-2000
^D. Delsate and R. Weis. (2010). La Couche à Crassum (Toarcien moyen) au Luxembourg: stratigraphie et faunes de la coupe de Dudelange-Zoufftgen. Ferrantia 62:35-62