Notice on the fossil fishes found in California by W.P. BLAKE. American Journal of Science and Arts, Series 2, 21, 272–275
Notice of the fossil fishes. In Reports of explorations and surveys, to ascertain the most practicable and economical route for a railroad from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean, Volumes I to X, 5: 313–316
Bibliography and catalogue of the fossil Vertebrata of North America. Bulletin of the United States Geological and Geographical Survey of the Territories, 179, 1–868
The fossil fishes of California with supplementary notes on other species of extinct fishes. Bulletin Department of Geology, University of California, 5(7), 95–145
Supplementary notes on fossil sharks. Bulletin Department of Geology, University of California, 7, 243–256
Fossil fishes of southern california, Part II. Fossil Fishes of the Miocene (Monterey) Formations. Stanford University Publications, University Series: 13–60
Fossil sharks and rays of the Pacific slope of North America. Bulletin of the Southern California Academy of Sciences, 22, 27–63, pl. 1–10
Late Cretaceous and Cenozoic Squalomorphii of the Northwest Pacific Ocean. PhD, Univ. of California Berkeley, 553 p., 71 fig.
Zahnmorphologische Untersuchungen an rezenten und fossilen Haien der Ordnungen Chlamydoselachiformes und Echinorhiniformes. Palaeo Ichthyologica, 1, 1–315
Fossil Sharks of the Chesapeake Bay Region. Egan Rees and Boyer, Inc. Columbia. 146 pp.
Haaien- en roggentanden uit Liessel (N.-B.) Fontys Hogescholen, Tilburg
The Neogene sharks, rays, and bony fishes from Lee Creek Mine, Aurora, North Carolina. In Geology and paleontology of the Lee Creek Mine, North Carolina, III, Clayton E. RAY & David J. BOHASKA. Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology, 90: 71–202, 84fig., 1 tabl.
Fossil Shark Teeth of the World. Lamna Books, 170 p
The elasmobranch fauna of the late Burdigalian, Miocene, at Werder-Uesen, Lower Saxony, Germany, and its relationships with Early Miocene faunas in the North Atlantic, Central Paratethys and Mediterranean. Palaeontos, 20, 1–170
Neogene and Quaternary Fossils of North Carolina, A Field Guide. North Carolina Fossil Club, Durham, 58 p.
Oldest evidence of bramble sharks (Elasmobranchii, Echinorhinidae) in the Lower Cretaceous of southeast France and the evolutionary history of orbitostylic sharks. (plus Supplementary data). Cretaceous Research, 35, 81–87
DOI: 10.1016/j.cretres.2011.11.021
Echinorhinus caspius, Echinorhinus richiardii, Echinorhinus pollerspoecki, Echinorhinus schoenfeldi, Echinorhinus cf. riepli, Echinorhinus priscus, Paraechinorhinus riepli, Echinorhinus sp., Echinorhinus pfauntschi, Echinorhinus blakei, Echinorhinus pozzii, Echinorhinus kelleyi, Echinorhinus weltoni, Echinorhinus eyrensis, Echinorhinus australis, Gibbechinorhinus lewyi, Orthechinorhinus pfeili, In Database of fossil elasmobranchteeth, www.shark–references.com, World Wide Web electronic publication, Version 04/2013