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
Encombe Bay, Swyre Head–Chapman's Pool, Dorset
(
Highlights
Swyre Head to Chapman's Pool includes an important array of late Kimmeridgian reptile sites.
These have produced various species of turtle, pterosaur, dinosaur, plesiosaur and ichthyosaur, including the plesiosaur Kimmerosaurus and a new theropod dinosaur.
Introduction
The Upper Kimmeridge Clay exposed between Swyre Head and Chapman's Pool also known as Encombe Bay or Egmont Bight
Description
The Kimmeridge Clay in this section covers the upper part of the Late Kimmeridgian. It consists of a sequence of grey and bituminous shales and clays with stone bands towards the base (
Thickness (m) | |
Portland Sand, Massive Bed | |
Upper Kimmeridgian fittoni Zone | |
Hounstout Marl | 21.00 |
Hounstout Clay | 8.35 |
Rhynchonella and Lingula Beds (upper part) | 8.00 |
37.35 | |
rotunda Zone | |
Rhynchonella and Lingula Beds (lower part) | 15.00 |
rotunda Shales | 13.50 |
rotunda Nodule Bed | 1.80 |
Shales and clays | 4.25 |
Hard bituminous shales | 1.25 |
35.80 | |
pallasioides Zone | |
Clays and shales (9 individual subunits, Cope, 1978) | 30.00 |
pectinatus Zone | |
paravirgatus Subzone | |
Grey shales | 12.10 |
Hard shale | 0.60 |
Shales | 6.10 |
Freshwater Steps Stone Band | 0.40 |
19.20 | |
eastlecottensis Subzone | |
Shales | 8.80 |
Middle White Stone Band | 0.45 |
Shales and mudstones | 8.90 |
White Stone Band | 0.95 |
19.10 |
The beds have an apparent easterly dip, and the ammonite zones occur in sequence from north-west to south-east
The reptile specimens have apparently been collected largely at beach level either in the wave-cut platform west of Freshwater Steps, or in Chapman's Pool
Specific localities in the pectinatus Zone include the 'ledges below Swyre Head,
Recent finds confirm the occurrence of reptiles in the pectinatus Zone. A vertebra and ribs of a crocodilian were found by R.A. Langham in the White Stone Band, thus base of the eastlecottensis Subzone, to the west of Freshwater Steps. The same collector also found some limb bones of a pterosaur just above the Freshwater Steps Stone Band at Freshwater Steps, thus paravirgatus Subzone. Finally, P.A. Langham found some turtle remains (BMNH R8699) from a horizon in the shales just above the Freshwater Steps Stone Band, about 300 m west of Freshwater Steps, thus pectinatus Zone also.
Brown (1981, p. 301) reported a skull and isolated teeth of the plesiosaur Kimmerosaurus langhami (BMNH R8431) from 'Endcombe Bay' (also known as Egmont Bay) in the Crushed Ammonoid Shales
Other records include phalanges of a pliosauroid (DORCM G639) from 'below Encomb(e) House at…
All of the finds, as at Kinuneridge Bay, appear to have been made in the shales; Brown (1981, p. 304) notes that BMNH R8431 was preserved in a clay matrix. The preservation of this skull was generally good, and surface ornament was visible. Parts of the skull were slightly crushed and the dentary somewhat 'eroded'. Other specimens from this area are generally isolated postcranial elements (vertebrae and limb bones) or slightly disturbed partial skeletons. Fuller details are given by Taylor and Benton (1986).
Fauna
Testudines: Cryptodira: Thalassemyidae
Pelobatochelys sp. BMNH R8699
Archosauria: Crocodylia: Thalattosuchia
'Teleosaurus sp.' DORCM G.347
Dakosaurus/Metriorhynchus R.A. Langham collection
Archosauria: Pterosauria
Unnamed R.A. Langharn collection
Archosauria: Dinosauria: Theropoda
Gracile theropod (OUM)
Sauropterygia: Plesiosauria: Cryptoclididae
Kimmerosaurus langhami Brown, 1981 Type specimen: BMNH R8431; also BMNH R10042
Sauropterygia: Plesiosauria: Elasmosauridae
'Colymbosaurus sp.' DORCM G.172, G.184
Sauropterygia: Plesiosauria: Pliosauridae
Pliosaurus sp. DORCM G.186, G.639; Etches collection
Ichthyopterygia: Ichthyosauria
Grendelius sp. BRSMG
'Ophthalmosaurus sp.' DORCM G.8, BMNH R8693
Interpretation
The turtle Pelobatochelys is represented by a partial carapace, about 0.4 m long, with remains of limbs (BMNH R8699). The genus is known only from Dorset and was founded on carapace platesfrom Weymouth. If this undescribed specimen from Encombe Bay belongs to Pelobatochelys, the remains include the first record of its limbs.
The partial skeleton of 'Teleosaurus' (vertebrae, ribs, jaws; DORCM G.347) may belong to one of several Kimmeridgian crocodile genera (e.g. Dakosaurus, Machimosaurus, Steneosaurus, Teleosaurus). Exact identification depends on snout length and features of the skull roof which is not preserved.
A gracile theropod dinosaur is represented by a partial skeleton of the hip region in the OUM.
The only fossil reptile from Encombe Bay that has been described is Kimmerosaurus langhami (Brown, 1981, pp. 300–14; Brown et al., 1986). The type specimen (BMNH R8431;
The elasmosaurids have very long necks, produced by increases both in the number of cervical vertebrae and in the lengths of centra, particularly among the anterior cervicals. The anterior cervicals possess a further distinguishing character, in the development of a lateral keel and an articular face which has either a single shallow concavity or an open V-shape (Brown, 1981). The cryptoclidids, by contrast, have medium-length necks (28–32 cervical vertebrae), and the anterior cervical centra have a deep concavity with a convex rim.
The other plesiosaur remains from Encombe probably belong to Colymbosaurus (DORCM G172, G184, G5093) and Pliosaurus (DORCM G186, G639) respectively.
The ichthyosaur remains (BMNH R8693; DORCM G.8) could belong to one of several genera that occur elsewhere in the British Kimmeridgian (e.g. Macropterygius, Grendelius, Nannopterygius, Ophthalmosaurus). Identification is based on the shape of the skull (e.g. snout length, shape, size and position of openings) or on features of the paddles. A new specimen of Grendelius in the BRSMG will be described shortly (McGowan, in prep.). The taxonomy of Late Jurassic ichthyosaurs is controversial (McGowan, 1976; A. Kirton, pers. comm., 1981), and fragmentary remains are hard to identify.
Comparison with other localities
Late Kimmeridgian reptile sites are rare, and none has been highly productive. Some ichthyosaurs, plesiosaurs and crocodilians have come from units equivalent to those described here at Ringstead Bay, Dorset
Conclusions
The whole coast section from Swyre Head to Chapman's Pool (Encombe Bay) represents the best British Late Kimmeridgian (=Early Tithonian) reptile site. It has produced a selection of marine reptiles that have not yet been described in full. One undescribed turtle may be the first specimen of the poorly known genus Pelobatochelys with limb remains. The two partial skulls and some postcranial remains of Kimmerosaurus langhami Brown, 1981 show that this was a plesiosaur with several unique features that may form part of a lineage separate from the commoner plesiosaurid–elasmosaurid and pliosaur groups. Marine faunas of this age are rare elsewhere in the world, with similarly isolated remains known from France and Germany. At the same time in North America and Africa, the only known faunas are of terrestrial organisms. This potential for future discoveries gives the site its conservation value.