Dineley, D. & Metcalf, S. GCR Editor: D. Palmer. 1999. Fossil Fishes of Great Britain. Geological Conservation Review Series No. 16. JNCC, Peterborough, ISBN 1 86107 470 0. The original source material for these web pages has been made available by the JNCC under the Open Government Licence 3.0. Full details in the JNCC Open Data Policy
Holborn Head Quarry
Highlights
Holborn Head Quarry in Caithness (Highland) has produced specimens of 10 or 11 species of fossil fishes, and it is especially well known for the fine, abundant specimens of the small osteolepid Osteolepis panderi.
Introduction
In the large disused cliff-top quarry at Ness of Litter, 3 km W of Holburn Head
Description
The quarry exposes a 6 m high face of carbonate or organic laminated siltstones with subaqueous shrinkage cracks. These are lacustrine sediments from the Ham–Skarfskerry Subgroup of the Upper Caithness Flagstone Group (Donovan et al., 1974; Westoll, in House et al., 1977; Hamilton and Trewin, 1994). The flagstones are thinner-bedded and with lighter weathering colours than those of the underlying Latheron Subgroup, as seen at Banniskirk Quarry (q.v.). Grey and buff sandstones occur in the upper part of the Subgroup. The rocks are of probable mid-Givetian age (Westoll, in House et al., 1977), as indicated by the fauna that probably belongs to Fish Zone 5 of Donovan et al. (1974), as found also at Weydale Quarry (q.v.).
The fish-bearing stratum is 130 mm below the bedding plane which forms the floor of the quarry, and is exposed by a small excavation in the south-east corner of the quarry, near the entrance. The fishes are in a tough, dark brown ish grey, calcareous siltstone laminite, and they are difficult to remove. A thickness of 260 mm of fish-bearing siltstones are exposed in the excavation, and the base of the unit is not seen. Fishes are very common throughout the 260 mm thick unit, and they are usually complete, but flattened and poorly preserved. Small attractive complete osteolepids, Osteolepis panderi, are very common. Disarticulated skull roofs can also be found and, although less common than complete specimens, their preservation is better. An important addition to knowledge of these strata and their fossil fish is Hamilton and Trewin's (1994) detailed consideration of the taphonomy and palaeoecology.
There are problems in assigning provenances of older museum specimens from this area since the locality label 'Holburn Head' includes several sites of different age, from Brims Hill in the west to the headland of Holburn Head. 'Thurso' is also often used very loosely as a specimen label (Miles and Westoll, 1963), and can include material from Holburn Head Quarry. Therefore, in the list below, some of the rarer species are queried, and may not be from this site at all.
Fauna
The fish fauna from Holburn Head Quarry includes the remains of active forms most of which were common and widespread throughout the Orcadian Basin.
Acanthodii: Acanthodiformes: Acanthodidae
Mesacanthus peachi Egerton, 1861
M. pusillus (Agassiz, 1844)
?Cheiracanthus sp.
acanthodian indet.
Placodermi: Arthrodira: Coccosteidae
Dickosteus threiplandi Miles and Westoll, 1963
Placodermi: Arthrodira: Homosteidae
?Homosteus milleri Traquair, 1888
Osteichthyes: Sarcopterygii: Osteolepiformes: Osteolepididae
Osteolepis panderi Pander, 1860
Gyroptychius agassizi Traill, 1841
Thursius pholidotus Traquair, 1888
Osteichthyes: Sarcopterygii: Porolepiformes:
Holoptychiidae
Glyptolepis sp.
Osteichthyes: Sarcopterygii: Dipnoi: Dipteridae
Dipterus cf. valenciennesi Sedgwick and Murchison, 1828
Dickosteus threiplandi is a large coccosteid fish with a total length (head plus body) of over 0.5 m. The holotype is from Spittal (q.v.), but a large complete specimen from 'Holburn Head' was described by Miles and Westoll (1963), and specimens of plates from 'Brims' were also figured.
Osteolepis panderi (syn. O. microlepidotus Valenciennes and Pentland, 1860) is by far the most common fish at Holburn Head. Hamilton and Trewin (1994) recorded the distribution and abundance of this and four other species throughout the most productive 50 cm of the fish bed at Holborn Head Quarry, and also the size distribution of O. panderi within the bed
Interpretation
As at other localities, the vertebrate-bearing rocks are interpreted as lacustrine deposits. Fish fossils are found in a dark-coloured siltstone, which may represent an anoxic phase or a salinity crisis leading to a high fish mortality; mass mortality levels are associated with dolomitic laminae and hence with salinity crises (Hamilton and Trewin, 1994). The dominance of Osteolepis panderi may be a reflection of the absence of a large predator, and the lack of juveniles of this species suggests that the young kept to other parts of the lake and so were spared the mass mortality event.
Hamilton and Trewin (1994) plotted the distribution and abundance of the fish within the Holborn Head Quarry fish bed. This band is some 50 cm of dense carbonate or organic laminite, deposited apparently during the deepest part of the lake cycle
Conclusion
The conservation value of Holburn Head Quarry results from the production of excellent specimens of the small osteolepiform Osteolepis panderi, as well as a fauna of acanthodians and placoderms typical of Fish Bed 4. Finds have been made recently in an excavation in the quarry floor to reach the fish bed, and there is future potential for more finds.