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
Spittal Quarry
Highlights
Spittal Quarry (north-east Caithness, Highland) has produced an important assemblage of fossil fishes of Mid-Devonian age. The fishes are younger than those from Achanarras, and represent a key assemblage for dating. The site produced the first specimens of the placoderm Dickosteus threiplandi, as well as rare specimens of the large osteostracan Cephalaspis magnifica, a group that is otherwise poorly known from rocks of this age
Introduction
Spittal Quarry exposes lacustrine dolomitic laminites of Givetian age. Fossils are very rare at Spittal, and specimens were found only because of the long phase of over 100 years of quarrying by hand that has turned up occasional fossils. The quarry has been worked for paving slabs since the 1850s (Traquair, 1893), and latterly for luxury objects such as fireplaces and coffee tables. It is still operating. The locality is one of those described in the field guide by Trewin and Hurst (1993).
Description
The strata consist of alternations of dolomitic laminites and fine-grained grey sandstones, of the Latheron Subgroup of the Upper Caithness Flagstone Group and represents beds of 'Faunal Zone 4' (Donovan et al., 1974). The term 'Spittal Beds' was used by Miles and Westoll (1963) for all the Caithness equivalents of the Upper Stromness Flagstones of Orkney, which overlie the Achanarras horizon, but this was rejected by Donovan et al. (1974) because the relationships to underlying beds are uncertain at Spittal or other inland quarries.
The few fossils that have come from this site are extremely well preserved. They include plants and fishes, with plant material being rather more common than fish. The fine state of preservation of the fishes allows detailed study of their morphology, which lends them disproportionate importance in anatomical and systematic studies. Fishes from Spittal are housed in the RSM and NHM.
Fauna
The fossil fishes from Spittal Quarry include the following taxa:
AGNATHA
Osteostraci: Cephalaspidiformes:
Cephalaspididae
Cephalaspis magnifica Traquair, 1893
GNATHOSTOMATA
Placodermi: Arthrodira: Homosteidae
Homosteus milleri Traquair, 1888
Placodermi: Arthrodira: Coccosteidae
Dickosteus threiplandi Miles and Westoll, 1963
Osteichthyes: Sarcopterygii: Dipterida: Dipteriidae
Dipterus sp.
Interpretation
The type specimen of Dickosteus threiplandi is a well-preserved and articulated fossil, which is unusual for this type of placoderm. The specimens of Cephalaspis magnifica are rarely complete, and in most all that remains are isolated headshields, scattered fragments or bony scales resulting from the break-up of the dead fishes prior to burial.
Cephalaspis magnifica
Dickosteus threiplandi
Specimens of Dipterus from Spittal are usually large individuals. Dipterus occurs at many Caithness Flagstone localities. A probable new, and as yet undescribed species of Dipterus is also represented in the collection from Spittal.
In 1976 a fish bed was exposed in the base of the quarry It contained Dipterus, and was a true fish laminite. It is possible that this was the top of the Achanarras horizon below. Spittal Quarry is separated from Achanarras Quarry by 2 km of peat- and drift-covered land with no exposure, and the stratigraphical relationship between the two quarries is very uncertain.
Conclusion
The rare fishes from Spinal Quarry, which confer its conservation value, are important for four reasons: (1) their good quality of preservation, (2) the presence of Dickosteus threiplandi and other fishes characteristic of Fish Zone 4 of Donovan et al. (1974), (3) the fact that Spittal Quarry is the type locality of D. threiplandi, and (4) the presence of Cephalaspis magnifica, the only known cephalaspid from the Orcadian Basin, and the only one from the Middle Devonian.