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
Late Cretaceous: The Chalk
The Late Cretaceous Chalk facies
Although the Chalk sequence in the British Isles is fairly uniform in sedimentary character, enough variation exists for a lithostratigraphical classification. The Chalk has traditionally been split into three informal lithological groupings, the 'Lower', 'Middle' and 'Upper' Chalk based on the presence of certain marker bands, such as glauconitic marls, hardground horizons and flints. This broad lithostratigraphical tripartite division of the Chalk was recognized as early as 1822 by John Phillips (in Conybeare and Phillips, 1822) and has been used subsequently by many authors. However, by far the most satisfactory subdivision of the Chalk is by zone fossils, for example echinoids or nannofossils. Jukes-Browne and Hill (1903, 1904) provided a classic review of the stratigraphy of the British Chalk, and their work has been revised by Kennedy (1969), Rawson et al. (1978) and Wright and Kennedy (1984).
Chalk fishes are commonly represented by fragmentary specimens, but whole uncrushed fish are also known from several localities in the 'Lower' and 'Middle' Chalk. They were first noticed in the 'Lower' and 'Middle' Chalk succession of the South Downs (Sussex and Kent) in the early part of the 19th century by Gidean Mantell, who subsequently made a large collection of fossil fishes there (Mantell, 1822). The writings of Mantell and Louis Agassiz (1833–1845) aroused the interest in south-cast England of several local collectors, which led to a series of papers in the mid- and late 19th century on the Chalk and its fossils. Important references of that time include Dixon (1850), Barrois (1876), Newton (in Dixon, 1878), Jukes-Browne and Hill (1903, 1904) and culminating in the monograph of Chalk fishes by A.S. Woodward (1902–1912). Although more recent reviews of the certain elements of the fish fauna have been completed and several taxa renamed or redescribed, Woodward's monograph is still the most complete account of Chalk fishes. A more recent summary was completed by the Palaeontological Association (Longbottom and Patterson, 1987) and this includes the modern classification and terminology.
Fish remains are widely distributed in the Chalk, but apart from microvertebrate remains recovered from acid digestion of the soft limestone, they are quite rare at outcrop. Most of the large collections of partial and complete fish specimens were made in the 19th century when the Chalk was worked by hand at many pits throughout the country; today only fragmentary remains are usually found. The Lower Chalk and in particular the old subglobosus Zone (equivalent to the Upper Cenomanian;
The Cenomanian and Santonian successions of Lebanon have yielded extremely important fish faunas, in which whole fish specimens have been recovered. These include sharks, rays and bony fish material comparable to that of the British Chalk.
Fish sites
Fish material has been recovered from at least 100 Chalk localities spread throughout the whole outcrop (based on literature references and museum specimens). However, most of these sites have only yielded fragmentary remains of one or two fish species, and thus only the more significant ones are listed below by county from the south-west to north-east, with zones indicated, where known (taken mainly from Jukes-Browne and Hill, 1903; 1904; Woodward, 1902–1912):
WILTSHIRE: Porton Railway Cutting (Upper Chalk, coranguinum Zone;
HAMPSHIRE: Bar End Pit (Lower Chalk, 'H. subglobosus'Zone; ten species); Hursley Pits (Upper Chalk, quadrata Zone;
BERKSHIRE: Boxford Chalk Pit (Upper Chalk, Turonian–Santonian;
SUSSEX: Amberley Station Quarry (Lower Chalk, Chalk Marl, dixoni Zone and Middle Chalk, labiatus and lata Zones;
SURREY: South Croydon (Upper Chalk, coranguinum Zone; 12 species); Hailing (Upper Chalk, coranguinum Zone;
KENT: Folkestone (Lower Chalk, Chloritic Marl and Chalk Marl, mantelli and dixoni Zones;
BEDFORDSHIRE: Totternhoe Chalk Pit (Lower Chalk, Totternhoe Stone, rhotomagense and jukesbrowni Zones;
HERTFORDSHIRE: Arlesey Quarry, Hitchin (Lower Chalk, Totternhoe Stone, rhotomagense and jukesbrowni Zones;
CAMBRIDGESHIRE: Cherry Hinton (Lower Chalk, Totternhoe Stone, rhotomagense and jukesbrowni Zones and Upper Chalk, Chalk Rock, plana Zone;
NORFOLK: Hunstanton Cliffs (Lower Chalk, Totternhoe Stone rhotomagense and jukes-browni Zones and Upper Chalk, Norwich Chalk, mucronata Zone
Six sites are selected as GCR sites on the basis of their important Cretaceous fish faunas:
- Blue Bell Hill Pits, Burham, Kent
[TQ 738 617] . Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian–Turonian), Lower Chalk–Upper Chalk. - Totternhoe (Chalk Pit), Totternhoe, Bedfordshire
[SP 982 222] . Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian), Lower Chalk (Totternhoe Stone). - Southerham (Machine Bottom Pit), Southerham, Lewes, East Sussex
[TQ 432 091] . Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian–Turonian), Lower Chalk (Chalk Marl, Grey Chalk and Plenus Marl) and Middle Chalk (Melbourn Rock). - Southerham Grey Pit, Southerham, Lewes, East Sussex
[TQ 427 090] . Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian), Lower Chalk (Chalk Marl and Grey Chalk). - Southerham (Lime Kiln Quarries), Southerham, Lewes, East Sussex
[TQ 426 096] . Late Cretaceous (Turonian–Coniacian), Middle Chalk ('Strahan's Hardground': Ranscombe Member). - Boxford Chalk Pit, Berkshire
[SU 431 719] . Late Cretaceous (Turonian– Santonian) Upper Chalk.