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
Isle of Portland reptile sites
Highlights
The Isle of Portland is riddled with old quarries and cliffs that have been the source of a diverse array of fossil marine reptiles
Introduction
The latest Jurassic Portlandian limestone of the Isle of Portland has long been famous for its marine reptiles. Many skeletons and individual bones of these reptiles
The Portland Beds of the Isle of Portland has been described by Damon (1884, pp. 79–97), H.B. Woodward (1895, pp. 196–202), Strahan (1898, pp. 60–71), Arkell (1933, pp. 492–7; 1947c, pp. 118–22), Cope (in Torrens, 1969a, pp. A53–A57), Cope and Wimbledon (1973), and Wimbledon (in Cope et al., 1980b, pp. 88–9). Portland reptiles have been described by Owen (1842b, 1869, 1884b), Lydekker (1889a, 1889b, 1890a), Gaffney (1975a, 1976), McGowan (1976) and Brown (1981), and summarized by Delair (1958, 1959, 1960, 1966, 1992).
Description
The sequence, based on Arkell (1947c) and Wimbledon (in Cope et al., 1980b) is:
Purbeck Limestone Formation 'Lulworth Beds': algal limestone (caps) with dirt beds and plant remains, passing up into argillaceous and laminated limestones | c. 30 |
Portland Stone Formation | |
Portland Freestone Member: | |
Roach: cream-coloured oolite with moulds of bivalves, gastropods (northern half of island); Whit Bed Freestone: buff oolite; Curf and Chert: soft chalky micrite and micrite full of chert (northern half of island); Little Roach: Shelly oolitic limestone; Base Bed Freestone: soft, white oolitic limestone | 9 |
Cherty Beds: limestones, predominantly micrites, with nodules and beds of chert, with giant ammonites | 15 |
Basal Shell Bed: hard micrite with a rich fauna (bivalves, gastropods, ammonites, echinoids, bryozoa, fish and reptiles) | 2.7 |
Portland Clay | 4–6 |
Portland Sand | |
West Weare Sandstones: brown and grey dolomites and sandy cementstones | 15 |
Cast Beds | 1.3 |
Exogyra Bed: 'stiff marl/limestone packed with Nanogyra nana | 2.5 |
Upper Black Nore Beds: black silts/silty clays with lines of light grey limestone nodules | 12 |
Black Nore Sandstone: hard, black argillaceous sandstone with intensely hard concretions | 2 |
Most specimen labels, and published descriptions, have little more locality and horizon data than 'Portland'. However, several authors have pointed to the Cherty Beds and the Basal Shell Bed as source horizons. Damon (1884, p. 86) noted 'Saurian remains' from the Cherty Beds of the Verne district (north-eastern part of the Isle) and a partial skeleton of a plesiosaur in the Museum of the Royal Engineer's Office at The Verne Works. Cox (1925) recorded the plesiosaur Cimoliasaurus portlandicus in the Basal Shell Bed. Savage (1958) noted a specimen of C. portlandicus 'probably from the Whit or Base Bed Freestone'. Centra, probably of ichthyosaurs, are not uncommon in the West Weare Sandstones at the top of the Portland Sand (W.A. Wimbledon, pers. comm. to M.J.B., 1992)
Several recently collected specimens have locality data. A centrum of C. portlandicus (DORCM G.177) is labelled 'Little Beach, NE of the Verne', thus a specimen that has probably fallen from The Verne. A further partial plesiosaur skeleton (DORCM G.181) is labelled 'below coastguard station, E. side, H. tide level —
On the basis of these scraps of information, it may he concluded that most of the fossil reptiles from Portland came from the Portland Stone, and from a variety of localities. A selection of exposures is chosen for the GCR site since no particular quarry has proved to be the single main source.
Fauna
Fossil reptiles from Portland are preserved in several major collections. A list of species recorded is given, with repository numbers of type specimens. An indication is also noted of the number of specimens of each species preserved in major collections (especially BMNH, CAMSM, DORCM and OUM).
Numbers | |
Testudines: Cryptodira | |
Plesiochelys planiceps (Owen, 1842) Type specimen: OUM J.1582 | 3 |
Pleurosternon portlandicum Lydekker, 1889 Type specimen: BMNH 44807 | 1 |
Portlandemys mcdowelli Gaffney, 1975 Type specimen: BMNH R2914 | 4 |
Archosauria: Dinosauria: Saurischia: | |
Theropoda | |
'Megalosaurid' | 2 |
Archosauria: Dinosauria: Saurischia: | |
Sauropoda | |
Pelorosaurus sp. | 1 |
Sauropterygia: Plesiosauria: | |
Elasmosauridae | |
Colymbosaurus portlandicus (Owen, 1869) Type specimen: BMNH 40640 | 33 |
Sauropterygia: Plesiosauria: Pliosauridae | |
?Pliosaurus brachydeirus Owen, 1841 | 2 |
Ichthyopterygia: Ichthyosauria | |
Macropterygius thyreospondylus (Owen, 1840) | 2 |
Interpretation
The turtle remains from Portland have proved to be of some interest recently. Plesiochelys planiceps (Owen, 1842) was based on a single cranium and partial carapace (Owen, 1842b, pp. 168–70). It was a relatively large animal (skull 90 gun long) with the temporal fossa completely roofed by postfrontal and parietal bones and a deep notch immediately behind the maxilla
The third Portland turtle is Pleurosternon portlandicus Lydekker, 1889b (pp. 215–16), a species based on a carapace which is only 250 mm long. Młynarski (1976, p. 120) mentioned the species briefly and referred the family Pleurosternidae to Testudines inc. sed.
Dinosaurs from the Isle of Portland are represented by some metatarsals and a damaged vertebra of a 'megalosaurid' (Delair, 1992), and by a tooth named Ornithopsis sp. by Delair (1959, p. 83). Ornithopsis is currently ascribed to Pelorosaurus (Steel, 1970, p. 68).
Pliosaurus portlandicus Owen, 1869 (pp. 8–12) was described on the basis of a right hind paddle with a 370 mm long femur. Lydekker (1889a, pp. 227–30; 1890a, pp. 274–5) ascribed P. portlandicus to Cimoliasaurus and listed many specimens of vertebrae and limb bones. Brown (1981, pp. 314–17, 324) synonymized C. portlandicus with many other Late Jurassic plesiosaurs as Colymbosaurus trochanterius (Owen, 1840). Savage (1958) reported a recent find of a femur of C. portlandicus. Lydekker (1890a, pp. 271–2) and Delair (1959, p. 70) note the head of an ischium and the distal portion of a propodial (BMNH R1679, R.1680) from Portland as Pliosaurus brachydeirus, but Tarlo (1960), in a review of British Late Jurassic pliosaurs, does not comment on these.
The ichthyosaur Macropterygius thyreospondylus is represented by a caudal vertebra from the 'Portland Oolite' (BMNH R1684; Delair, 1960, pp. 66–7). McGowan (1976) considered this species a taxon dubium because of the 'inadequate' type material, but it may be valid (A. Kirton, pers. comm. to M.J.B., 1982).
Comparison with other localities
Reptiles are relatively rare in the Portland Beds of Britain (listed near the beginning of the chapter). Of the turtles from the Isle of Portland, the genus Plesiochelys is known also from the Kimmeridge Clay of England, Switzerland, Bavaria and Hanover, the Portlandian (?) of eastern France, the Purbeck of Durlston Bay, the 'Upper Jurassic' of China, and the Wealden of the Isle of Wight and Sussex (Lydekker, 1889b; Gaffney, 1975a; Młynarski, 1976, pp. 55–7). Portlandemys is unique to the Isle of Portland. Pleurosternon is also known from the Purbeck Beds of Swanage (Lydekker, 1889b), and elsewhere in the Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous of western Europe and Asia (?) (Miynarski, 1976, p. 120). Colymbosaurus portlandicus is unique to the Portlandian of England but, if synonymized as C. trochanterius, it is well known from many localities in the Kimmeridge Clay also (Brown, 1981). Delair (1966, pp. 66–7) regarded the Portland M. thyreospondylus as the only English Portlandian ichthyosaur, although there are some ichthyosaur vertebrae from Swindon (OUM J.1585–6; BGS(GSM) old number). M thyreospondylus occurs in the Portlandian of the region of Boulogne (Huene, 1922, p. 91). The Portlandian fauna from the Isle of Portland is similar in many ways to the preceding Kimmeridgian faunas, but overall species diversity seems reduced, and turtles are perhaps relatively a little more diverse.
Conclusions
The Isle of Portland has yielded the best faunas of marine Portlandian reptiles in the world. Other marine faunas of this age are known from southern England, but the range of material is less. Better known faunas from elsewhere in the world (e.g. Morrison Formation, USA; Tendaguru, Tanzania) are dominated by terrestrial forms such as dinosaurs. The turtles from Portland include good skull material, and have formed the basis of recent reviews of early turtle anatomy and taxonomy. The plesiosaur material is good, and appears to have closest affinities with Kimmeridgian species. The sites include the best sources for marine reptiles of latest Jurassic age anywhere in the world and, with their continuing potential for new finds, they therefore have high conservation value.