It had a large, toothed rostrum closely resembling that of a modern-day sawfish. Despite formerly being classified within a family of extinct sawfish-like rays known as Sclerorhynchidae,[4] phylogenetic analyses indicate that Ischyrhiza, Schizorhiza, and Onchopristis form a distinct clade that groups closer with the extant family Rajidae, which contains the true skates, possibly rendering the suborder Sclerorhynchoideiparaphyletic.[5]
^ abWilliamson, Thomas E.; Kirkland, James I.; Lucas, Spencer G. (1993). "Selachians from the Greenhorn Cyclothem ("Middle" Cretaceous: Cenomanian–Turonian), Black Mesa, Arizona, and the Paleogeographic distribution of Late Cretaceous selachians". Journal of Paleontology. 67 (3): 447–474. doi:10.1017/s002233600003691x.
^ESTES, R. (1964) Fossil vertebrates from the Late Cretaceous Lance Formation, Eastern Wyoming. University of California Publications in Geological Sciences, 49: 1–180, 73 fig., 5 pl.
^Leidy (1856) - Notice of remains of extinct vertebrated animals of New-Jersey, collected by Prof. Cook of the State Geological Survey under the direction of Dr. W. Kitchell. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 8: 220–221