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
Chawley Brick Pits, Cumnor Hurst, Oxfordshire
Highlights
Chawley Brick Pits, Cumnor Hurst are famous for the dinosaur Camptosaurus, an important genus that proves a close link with North America during the Late Jurassic. The site has also produced other typical Kimmeridgian-age reptiles, plesiosaurs and ichthyosaurs.
Introduction
Chawley Brick Pits are important for their fauna of marine and terrestrial reptiles, and for the dinosaur Camptosaurus
The brickyard was formerly worked on the north side of Cumnor Hurst and displays the only exposure of Kimmeridge Clay in the area. Parts of the Cretaceous (Lower Greensand–Gault) are also seen. The section formerly spanned the Early and early Late Kimmeridgian, but this is now much reduced. The geology was described by Richardson et al. (1946), Arkell (1947a), McKerrow and Baden-Powell (1953) and Cope (1967, 1978; in Cope et al., 1980b). A sketch of a photograph of Chawley Brick Pit in the late 19th century is given by Pringle (1926, p. 98). The dinosaur and other reptile finds have been discussed by Phillips (1871), Prestwich (1879, 1880), Hulke (1880a), Lydekker (1888a, 1889c, 1890a) and Galton and Powell (1980).
Description
The section after Richardson et al. (1946, pp. 100–2), Arkell (1947a, pp. 106–7), McKerrow and Baden-Powell (1953, p. 97) and Cope (1967, 1978; in Cope et al., 1980b) is:
Thickness (m) | |
Northern Drift | 3.0 |
Lower Gault | 3.0 |
Lower Greensand | 6.1 |
Kimmeridge Clay | |
?pectinatus Zone | |
Shotover Grit Sands: bluish sandy clay (loam) weathering white to a depth of 1 m below junction, with brown weathering grey nodules | c. 4.3 |
(break in sequence) | |
wheatleyensis Zone | |
Wheatley Nodule Clays; dark shaly clays with big cementstone crackers, some crowded with Pectinatites (Virgatosphinctoides) cf. wheatleyensis, P. (V.) tutcheri, etc. and bivalves | seen to 2.4 |
(break in sequence) | |
eudoxus Zone, ?lower | |
autissiodorensis Zone | |
dark clays with Nanogyra virgula, Aulacostephanus eudoxus, aptychi and reptile bones | seen to 3.0 |
The fossil reptiles apparently came from the eudoxus Zone ('pseudomutabilis Zone' Arkell, 1947a, p. 106). Prestwich (1879, 1880) gave a detailed account of the finding of the dinosaur Camptosaurus. The skeleton was broken up in collecting, but nearly all elements were found associated. The fossil was found when a tramway was driven into the side of the hill 'in a thin 3 inch [75 mm] sandy seam intercalated in the clay'. This sand occurred about 34 ft (10.4 m) below the Lower Greensand, according to Prestwich (1880), and his section can be matched with Arkell's (1947a) section to confirm that the dinosaur came from the eudoxus Zone. Prestwich (1880) found Ichthyosaurus vertebrae and ribs and Pliosaurus and Dakosaurus teeth in the clay below (also eudoxus Zone), and Plesiosaurus vertebrae in the clay above (eudoxus or wheatleyensis Zone).
Fauna
Fossil reptiles from the Chawley Brickpits are preserved in the BMNH and OUM. Numbers of specimens and type specimens are indicated.
Numbers | |
Archosauria: Dinosauria: Ornithischia: | |
Ornithopoda | |
Camptosaurus prestwichii (Hulke, 1880) Type specimen: OUM J.3303 | 1 |
'dinosaur limb' | 1 |
Sauropterygia: Plesiosauria: | |
Elasmosauridae | |
Colymbosaurus trochanterius (Owen, 1840) Including 'type specimens' of Plesiosaurus validus Phillips, 1871, OUM J.2854–6 | c. 5 |
Sauropterygia: Plesiosauria: Pliosauridae | |
Pliosaurus brachydeirus Owen, 1841 | 1 |
Pliosaurus sp. | 8 |
Liopleurodon macromerus (Phillips, 1871) | 3 |
Ichthyopterygia: Ichthyosauria | |
Macropterygius thyreospondylus (Owen, 1840) | 2 |
Macropterygius trigonus (Owen, 1840) | 3 |
ichthyosaur indet. | 5 |
Interpretation
The ornithopod Camptosaurus prestwichii (see
The plesiosaurs and ichthyosaurs from the Chawley Brick Pits need little comment since they are better represented elsewhere in the British Kimmeridge Clay. Compared with other sites, Chawley lacks crocodiles and turtles. The plesiosaurs, represented by vertebrae and skull remains, probably all belong to Colymbosaurus trochanterius (Owen, 1840), the commonest valid Kimmeridgian genus (Brown, 1981). The species P. validus Phillips (1871) was based on vertebrae from Shotover, Cumnor and Baldon (Phillips, 1871, pp. 370–2), but Brown (1981, p. 324) regarded the species as a nomen dubium. The rarer ichthyosaur remains include several species regarded as taxa dubia by McGowan (1976), but a detailed revision is required (A. Kirton, pers. comm., 1981).
Comparison with other localities
The plesiosaurs, pliosaurs and ichthyosaurs from Chawley are typical of other British Kimmeridgian Clay sites. The dinosaur Camptosaurus has been recorded elsewhere in the European Kimmeridgian only from Portugal (a femur, Galton, 198(k). Dinosaur bones have been recorded elsewhere in the British Kimmeridge Clay from Kimmeridge Bay (Pelorosaurus); Smallmouth Sands, Dorset (Pelorasaurus, Dacentrurus); Gillingham, Dorset (Dacentrurus); Foxhangers, Wiltshire (?Megalosaurus); Rodbourne, Wiltshire (ankylosaur); Wootton-Bassett, Wiltshire (Dacentrurus); Swindon, Wiltshire (Bothriospondylus, Dacentrurus), Cottenham, Cambridgeshire (Pelorosaurus) and Ely, Cambridgeshire (Pelorosaurus, Dacentrurus), all but the first two and the last are lost as collecting sites.
Conclusions
Camptosaurus prestwichii is unique in several respects. It is the only ornithopod dinosaur from the British Kimmeridgian, and in fact by far the best preserved dinosaur of any kind from that stage in Britain. It is one of only two ornithopod skeletons described from the Late Jurassic outside North America and East Africa, and it is of palaeogeographic importance in confirming land links between North America and Europe during the Late Jurassic (Galton, 1980c). C. prestwichii is one of only two European specimens accepted as belonging to the' typically North American genus Camptosaurus. The specimen is important also in that a detailed account of its discovery and taphon-omy has been published (Prestwich, 1879, 1880).
This historical importance and the potential for future finds with re-excavation give the site its conservation value.