Where: Western Australia, Australia (31.7° S, 128.5° E: paleocoordinates 52.2° S, 119.0° E)
• coordinate based on nearby landmark
• outcrop-level geographic resolution
When: Wilson Bluff Formation, Priabonian (38.0 - 33.9 Ma)
• An Eocene age was originally suggested for the formation. This has been confirmed by the discovery of the Late Eocene bivalve Notostrea lubra, and Australanthus longianus, an echinoid of the same age. Foraminiferal assemblages suggest that the uppermost part is Late Eocene and the base is Middle Eocene (Li et al., 1996)
• group of beds-level stratigraphic resolution
Environment/lithology: deep subtidal shelf; lithified, shelly/skeletal, white, cherty/siliceous packstone
Size classes: macrofossils, mesofossils
Collection methods: Repository: Geological Survey of Western Australia
Primary reference: R. S. Craig. 2001. The Cenozoic Brachiopoda of the Bremer and Eucla Basins, southwest Western Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum 20:199-236 [M. Clapham/M. Manojlovic]more details
Purpose of describing collection: taxonomic analysis
PaleoDB collection 152430: authorized by Matthew Clapham, entered by Marko Manojlovic on 21.11.2013
Creative Commons license: CC BY (attribution)
Taxonomic list
Rhynchonellata | |
Aldingia furculifera Tate 1880 | |
Victorithyris garibaldiana, "Stethothyris sufflata" = Epacrothyris sufflata, "Stethothyris pectoralis" = Epacrothyris pectoralis, "Stethothyris tapirina" = Aliquantula tapirina, Magadinella woodsiana
Victorithyris garibaldiana Davidson 1862
"Stethothyris sufflata" = Epacrothyris sufflata Tate 1880
"Stethothyris pectoralis" = Epacrothyris pectoralis Tate 1880
"Stethothyris tapirina" = Aliquantula tapirina Hutton 1873
Magadinella woodsiana Tate 1880 | |
Liothyrella bulbosa Tate 1880
Liothyrella subcarnea Tate 1880 | |
Terebratulina christopheri Craig 2001
Murravia triangularis Tate 1880 |