PL3005, Killara Bluff (Paleocene of Australia)

Where: Victoria, Australia (37.8° S, 145.5° E: paleocoordinates 60.0° S, 149.9° E)

• coordinate based on political unit

• small collection-level geographic resolution

When: Pebble Point Formation, Thanetian (59.2 - 56.0 Ma)

Environment/lithology: coastal; poorly lithified sandstone

• Some sedimentologists have characterized the Pebble Point Formation as having been deposited in marginal rather than open marine environments, based on the presence of the foram Cyclammina. Yet, the common presence of echinoderms as well as nautilid cephalopods, both intolerant of salinity much higher or lower than open ocean values argues against this. While numerous clasts are present, other evidence suggests quiet sedimentation rather than high energy. Pebble Point Formation thought to have been deposited during a series of channeling and channel abandonment episodes. Mud rip-up clasts and mud drapes indicate times of channel abandonment. Shelly fauna mostly come from the upper half, which may represent a change from estuarine conditions to more open marine conditions.
• sandstone

Size class: macrofossils

Primary reference: T. A. Darragh. 1997. Gastropoda, Scaphopoda, Cephalopoda, and new Bivalvia of the Paleocene Pebble Point Formation, Victoria, Australia. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria 109(1):57-108 [A. Miller/K. Layou]more details

Purpose of describing collection: taxonomic analysis

PaleoDB collection 6269: authorized by Arnold Miller, entered by Karen Layou on 15.02.2000

Creative Commons license: CC BY (attribution)

Taxonomic list

Gastropoda
 Neogastropoda - Conidae
Marshallaria tumefacta n. sp. cone shell
Cephalopoda
 Nautilida - Hercoglossidae
Aturoidea distans Teichert 1943 nautiloid