Benton, M.J., Cook, E. and Hooker, J.J. 2005. Mesozoic and Tertiary Fossil Mammals and Birds of Great Britain. Geological Conservation Review Series No. 32, JNCC, Peterborough. 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
Durlston Bay, Swanage, Dorset
Introduction
The coast at Durlston Bay
Durlston Bay, or 'Durdlestone Bay' as it is known in old published accounts, has been studied for many decades. The first discoveries of mammal fossils were made around 1854 by the Reverend P.B. Brodie, who sent his finds to Richard Owen. Shortly after this, Samuel Beckles organized an excavation near the top of the cliffs. He unearthed many mammal fossils. Unfortunately there is some confusion concerning the exact stratigraphical position of these remains. Subsequent work at 'Beckles Pit' has failed to relocate the horizon excavated by him. More-recent work has focused on collecting from the 'dirt beds' and from fallen blocks of limestone found on the foreshore (Clemens et al., 1979). Furthermore, teeth have been described from the horizon represented at Sunnydown Farm, which is also in the Cherty Freshwater Member (Sigogneau-Russell and Ensom, 1994; Ensom and Sigogneau-Russell, 1998, 2000).
Description
The mammalian fauna from Durlston Bay comes from the Lulworth Formation
'The Mammal Bed (Dirt Bed') of Beckles' excavations (Bed 93 of Austen (1852); Bed 22 of Bristow; bed 83 of Clements (in Torrens, 1969)): always equated with beds 14–16 of the shore section, has yielded plant remains, ostracods, gastropods, bivalves, lizards… dinosaurs… and mammals (19 [now 20] species)'.
Thickness (m) | |
Purbeck Limestone Group | |
Durlston Formation | |
Upper 'Cypris' Clays and Shales Member | Total 12.8 |
Beds DB246 to DB224, including | |
Upper Purbeck Marble (= Blue Marble) DB244 | 0.76 |
Lower Purbeck Marble (= Red Marble) DB241 | 0.81 |
Green Marble DB237 to DB234 | 0.46 |
'Crocodile Bed' top of DB221 | |
Unio Member | Total 1.14 |
Beds DB223 to DB221 | |
Broken Shell Limestone Member | Total 8.15 |
Bed DB220 | |
Chief Bed Member | Total 8.15 |
Beds DB219 to DB190 | |
Corbula Member | Total 10.27 |
Beds DB189 to DB154 | |
Scallop Member | Total 1.55 |
Beds DB153 to DB146 | |
Intermarine Member (or Upper Building Stone) | Total 15.64 |
Beds DB145 to DB112, including | |
Leaning or Laning Vein DB144 to DB141 | 1.62 |
Royal Limestone DB140 | 0.30 |
Red Rag DB133 | 0.74–0.79 |
Under Rag DB131 | 0.69–0.76 |
Cinder Member | Total 2.95 |
Bed 111 | |
Lulworth Formation | |
Cherty Freshwater Member | Total 8.12 |
Beds DB110 to DB87, including: | |
Flint Bed (or Cherty Freshwater Bed) DB97 | 0.84 |
Marly Freshwater Member | Total 4.29 |
Beds DB86 to DB75, including | |
Mammal Bed DB83 | |
Soft Cockle Member | Total 23.16 |
Beds DB74 to DB42 | |
Hard Cockle Member (?) | Total 4.19 |
Beds DB42 to DB34 | |
Cypris' Freestones Member (?) | Total 15.47 |
Beds DB33 to DB11 | |
Broken Beds Member | At or below beach level |
Clements (1993, p. 197) described the Mammal Bed as:
'Dark-grey, Shelly, carbonaceous, calcareous clay and shale. Rests on an irregular surface of, and in part grades into, the bed below. Gastropods very abundant. Ostracods common. Some silicification.'
Clements (1993) published a sedimentary log of the section exposed in the northern half of Durlston Bay between Peveril Point
The Durlston Bay section spans the Jurassic–Cretaceous boundary. The boundary used to be placed at the top of the Lulworth Formation, below the Cinder Member. However, several authors have argued, on diverse biotic grounds, that the Cretaceous Period begins with the Cypris Freestones Member (see section above). This latter interpretation is followed here, making the Mammal Bed (within the Marly Freshwater Member in the section above) earliest Cretaceous (Berriasian) in age.
Fauna
The Durlston Bay section has yielded many thousands of identifiable specimens of fishes, reptiles and mammals. The reptiles include some 41 species of turtles, lizards, crocodilians, pterosaurs and dinosaurs and a rare plesiosaur and ichthyosaur. The fishes are described more fully by Dineley and Metcalf (1999) and the reptiles by Benton and Spencer (1995) in companion GCR volumes. The fishes and reptiles are found at a number of horizons, some of them near the base of the succession, in and around the Mammal Bed, but most of them from higher units, all of which are early Cretaceous in age.
MAMMALIA
Docodonta
Docodontidae
Peraiocynodon inexpectatus Simpson, 1928
Multituberculata
Plagiaulacidae
Plagiaulax becklesii Falconer, 1857
Bolodon minor (Falconer, 1857)
Bolodon crassidens Owen, 1871
Bolodon osborni Simpson, 1928
?Bolodon falconers (Owen, 1871)
?Bolodon elongatus Simpson, 1928
Triconodonta
Triconodontidae
Triconodon mordax Owen, 1859
Trioracodon ferox (Owen, 1871)
Trioracodon major (Owen, 1871)
Trioracodon oweni Simpson, 1928
Trechnotheria
Spalacotheriidae
Spalacotherium tricuspidens Owen, 1854 (including Peralestes longirostris Owen, 1871)
Spalacotherium evansae Ensom and Sigogneau-Russell, 2000
Spalacotherium hookeri Gill, 2004
Cladotheria
Peramuridae
Peramus tenuirostris Owen, 1871
Dryolestidae
Amblotherium nanum (Owen, 1871)
Amblotherium pusillum (Owen, 1871)
Kurtodon pusillus Osborn, 1888
Peraspalax talpoides Owen, 1871
Phascolestes mustelula (Owen, 1871)
The mammalian assemblage preserved in the sediments exposed at Durlston Bay is extremely diverse (20 species) for the Mesozoic Era
The multituberculates have been described as the 'rodents of the Mesozoic', as they commonly have large incisors and sharp-edged crushing cheek teeth. However, unlike rodents, the incisors were not ever growing and probably were used to winkle out endosperm from seeds that were first crushed by the bladed premolars (Krause, 1982). The spalacotheriids were mouse- to rat-sized animals with teeth adapted to slicing and puncturing prey: they were probably insectivores (Cassiliano and Clemens, 1979). The diverse cladotheres were shrew- to hedgehog-sized and also were insectivorous. The larger triconodonts may have been carnivorous (Jenkins and Crompton, 1979).
Most mammalian specimens here are represented by upper and lower jaws and some by partial skull and skeletal elements, not just isolated teeth.
Interpretation
The Purbeck Limestone strata were deposited in a low-lying area close to the sea. The facies preserved at the Duriston Bay site are indicative of brackish and freshwater environments. The Mammal Bed appears to have been deposited in a marsh or swamp environment (Clemens et al., 1979).
Comparison with other sites
The mammalian fauna preserved at Duriston Bay can be compared directly with the more recently discovered materials from Sunnydown Farm on the Isle of Purbeck and other sites nearby (Ensom et al., 1994; Sigogneau-Russell and Ensom, 1994; Ensom and Sigogneau-Russell, 2000; Sigogneau-Russell et al., 2001). Further afield, the mammalian fauna from Durlston Bay may be compared with the Late Jurassic assemblages from Como Bluff, Wyoming, USA. Two of the Durlston Bay genera have been described from Como Bluff, namely Trioracodon and Amblotherium, whereas two others, Ctenacodon and Docodon, are closely related to Bolodon and Peraiocynodon respectively. In addition, Tinodon micron from the Sunnydown Farm site is congeneric with T. bellus and T. lepidus from the Morrison Formation (Ensom and Sigogneau-Russell, 2000).
Conclusions
The mammal fauna preserved at the Duriston Bay site is one of the most important in the world. It is the type locality for all but one of the named species in the fauna. The faunal assemblage is especially diverse and includes taxa also found in Wyoming, USA. Much of the importance of this locality comes from its long history of research, but also from the unique diversity and excellent preservation of its mammalian fauna. The site also has great potential for continued study: the cliff section is constantly being eroded by the sea and undoubtedly will provide more fossils in the future.