Benton, M.J. & Spencer, P.S. 1995. Fossil Reptiles of Great Britain. Geological Conservation Review Series No. 10, JNCC, Peterborough, ISBN 0 412 62040 5. 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
Black Horse Quarry, Telham, East Sussex
Highlights
Black Horse Quarry, Telham is the main site of the Telham Bone Bed, a sediment which produced specimens of turtles, crocodilians, pterosaurs, dinosaurs, and a plesiosaur. This bone bed has produced relatively small bones, which supplement the larger elements found in coastal sites.
Introduction
Black Horse Quarry, Telham Hill, near Battle, east Sussex was formerly a well-known source of Early Cretaceous reptile remains. The dissociated bones were found in a thin bone bed, the Telham Bone Bed (
Description
The section at Black Horse Quarry (Boyd Dawkins, in Topley, 1875, pp. 63–4; thicknesses approximate) was:
ft | in | |
Surface soil | 1 | 0 |
Rust-coloured grey and white shales with indurated layers | 3 | 0 |
Rust and slate-coloured shales with ironstone | 3 | 0 |
Rust and slate-coloured shales without ironstone (Cyrena) | 6 | 0 |
Slate-coloured shales with a layer of a lighter colour (Cyrena and plants) | 3 | 0 |
Shale and clay (Cypridea, Cyrena and vegetable matter) | 3 | 6 |
Grey clay with nodules; the 'bone bed' [0–4 inches] in its lower part | 2 | 0 |
Calcareous grit [Tilgate Stone], fine grained and hard, dug for roads | 2 | 6 |
Calcareous grit [Tilgate Stone], blue on the unweathered surface | 2 | 0 |
The beds are within the Wadhurst Clay of the Hastings Beds (Valanginian) and the Telham Bone Bed has been regarded as equivalent to the Cliff End Bone Bed as exposed east of Hastings (q.v.; Allen, 1949; Lake and Shephard-Thorn, 1987). It lies above the main 'Tilgate Stone' horizon, and 6–10 m above the Top Ashdown Pebble Bed. According to the section given here, the bone bed is 0–0.1 m thick and occurs about 5.2 m (17 ft) below the soil surface. Binfield and Binfield (1854) noted insect remains 10–13 ft (c. 3–4 m) above the 'Calcareous grit' (Jarzembowski, 1976).
Boyd Dawkins (in Topley, 1875, p. 64) described the bone bed as 'composed of a mass of coprolites, bones, teeth, scutes and ganoid scales… It is conglomeratic in character and contains pebbles of white quartz, which vary in size from a pigeon's egg to a pea, and are all much worn and highly polished. Very few organic remains are perfect, but the great bulk of them have been reduced to the conditions of pebbles. The only perfect bones that have been found consist of the hard and solid phalanges of the larger reptilia… In the interior of one long dinosaurian bone there were fragments of jet… The condition of all these remains is precisely identical with those from the Crag 'coprolite' beds, and the bone-beds of the Rhaetic and Carboniferous rocks'.
Fauna
Many Wealden reptiles are labelled Tattle' or 'Telham' and Black Horse Quarry must have been the source of most of these. Some specimens (BMNH R2845–6) bear the label 'Lambert's Quarry, Black Horse', probably in reference to the former owner. Boyd Dawkins (in Topley, 1875, p. 64) listed reptile remains that he had identified from Black Horse Quarry. In the following list, numbers of specimens in the collections of BGS(GSM), BMNH and HASTM are given as an approximate guide to relative abundance:
Testudines: Cryptodira | ||
Plesiochelys sp. | 5 | |
Tretosternon bakewelli (Mantel, 1827) | 3 | |
Archosauria: Crocodylia: Neosuchia | ||
Goniopholis crassidens (Owen, 1842) | 8 | |
Suchosaurus cultridens (Owen, 1842) | 3 | |
Archosauria: Pterosauria: | ||
Pterodactyloidea | ||
Ornithocheirus? clifti (Mantel, 1844) | ? | |
Archosauria: Dinosauria: Saurischia: | ||
Theropoda | ||
'Megalosaurus' dunkeri Dames, 1884 | 1 | |
Megalosaurus' sp. | 2 | |
Archosauria: Dinosauria: Saurischia: | ||
Sauropoda | ||
?Cetiosaurus sp. | 1 | |
Pleurocoelus valdensis Lydekker, 1890 | 1 | |
Archosauria: Dinosauria: Ornithischia | ||
Iguanodon sp. | 10 | |
Hylaeosaurus armatus Mantel, 1833 | 1 | |
Sauropterygia: Plesiosauria: | ||
'Plesiosaurus' sp. | 4 |
Interpretation
Allen (1949, pp. 279–82) interpreted the Telham Bone Bed as a river deposit, pebbles and bones of which were rolled along for some distance before deposition. Allen (1976, pp. 393, 406) equated the Telham Bone Bed tentatively with either the Broad Oak Top Pebble Bed or the Cliff End Pebble (Bone) Bed (both low in the Wadhurst Clay Formation). The Bone Bed facies all appear to occur in 'the muddier parts of the shoreface, beneath a metre or so of water'.
The turtles Plesiochelys and Tretosternon are represented by broken carapace and plastron pieces not adequate for proper identification. These turtles were moderate to large in size (0.3–1 m plastron length). They are both classed as chelydroids (M1ynarski, 1976, pp. 55, 60), or Plesiochelys may be a chelonioid (Gaffney 1975b).
The crocodilians Goniopholis and Suchosaurus are based on fairly common teeth and vertebrae. These were both long-snouted aquatic forms, although the latter genus is essentially known only from teeth.
Both Topley (1875, p. 64) and Woodward and Sherborn (1890, p. 255) noted a pterosaur in the Black Horse Quarry fauna, but the specimen(s) have not been located. Ornithocheirus clifti was initially interpreted as a bird because of its hollow limb bones and its exact relationships are uncertain (Wellnhofer, 1978, p. 58).
The carnivorous dinosaur Megalosaurus is represented by vertebrae and teeth. Most of these have been named M. dunkeri, a species known also from the Wealden of Hannover (Germany), as well as other places in the south of England. Megalosaurus is typical of the Mid Jurassic, and Huene (1926) renamed this species Altispinax on the basis of the high neural spines on the vertebrae.
Herbivorous dinosaurs include the large sauropods ?Cetiosaurus and Pleurocoelus, the former represented by vertebrae, the latter by teeth from Black Horse Quarry. These generic assignments are probably incorrect — the Wealden sauropods urgently require restudy (Ostrom, 1970). Iguanodon, the commonest Wealden dinosaur, is recorded from Black Horse Quarry on the basis of teeth, vertebrae, limb bones and phalanges. Hylaeosaurus, an armoured ankylosaur has been identified tentatively on the basis of a vertebra.
Comparison with other sites
The nearest exposures of the Telham Bone Bed are at Rackwell Wood, Crowhurst (
Most of the turtles, crocodilians, pterosaurs and dinosaurs in the Black Horse Quarry fauna are common in the Wealden of southern England, and indeed many of them in Early Cretaceous sediments elsewhere in the world. New excavations are required, and more extensive series of specimens are needed, for more precise identifications, and for fuller comparisons, of the taxa present.
Conclusions
Black Horse Quarry, Telham has provided good collections of Wealden reptiles. Although the bones are disarticulated, and generally waterworn, the remains are relatively abundant in the thin bone bed. This is the type locality of the Telham Bone Bed, and it is the best site for fossil reptiles in that unit, an attribute that in combination with its potential for re-excavation gives the site its conservation value.