The Indian Cave Sandstone (Upper Pennsylvanian, Gzhelian) from the area of Peru, Nebraska, USA, has yielded
numerous isolated chondrichthyan remains and among them teeth and dermal denticles of the Symmoriiformes
Zangerl, 1981. Two tooth-based taxa were identified: a falcatid Denaea saltsmani Ginter and Hansen, 2010,
and a new species of Stethacanthus Newberry, 1889, S. concavus sp. nov. In addition, there occur a few long,
monocuspid tooth-like denticles, similar to those observed in Cobelodus Zangerl, 1973, probably representing
the head cover or the spine-brush complex. A review of the available information on the fossil record of
Symmoriiformes has revealed that the group existed from the Late Devonian (Famennian) till the end of the
Middle Permian (Capitanian).