Jianghanichthys
Jianghanichthys is an extinct genus of freshwater cypriniform fish from the Late Paleocene to Early Eocene of central and southern China, and the only member of the family Jianghanichthyidae. It is the oldest cypriniform fish known from body fossils, and the most basal known cypriniform.
The genus name Jianghanichthys derives from "Jianghan", the place where the first fossil remains of J. hubeiensis were found, and "ichthys" derives from the Greek word for 'fish'. It is also known as the "Chan Han fish" in the fossil trade.
Taxonomy
Two species are known, both of which were previously placed in Osteochilus:- J. hubeiensis - Early Eocene of Hubei, China
- J. sanshuiensis - Late Paleocene and Ypresian of Guangdong, China
Distribution
These fishes lived in the early Paleogene period. Fossils of Jianghanichthys have been found in Hubei and Guangdong, China.Fossils of J. hubeiensis are quite common and can be found in most shops. Most of these are among the thousands of well-preserved J. hubeiensis fossils which were discovered in an outcrop in a farm near Songzi in the 1980s. However, overcollection by commercial fossil collectors had destroyed this locality by 2005, though some new specimens have since been discovered with later fieldwork.