Leidy assigned the tooth to Archaeoceti, but without neither a stratigraphic nor a geographic locality it is virtually impossible to argue for or against this classification. The tooth was later classified as an Archaeoceti incertae sedis[4] and even a squalodontodontocete (a more recent whale), but can also be assigned to Protocetidae.[5]
Gillette, D. D. (1975). "Catalogue of Type Specimens of Fossil Vertebrates, Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia Introduction and Part I: Marine Mammals". Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 127: 63–66. JSTOR4064701.