Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/23661
Type: Journal article
Title: Plesiosaur remains from Cretaceous high-latitude non-marine deposits in southeastern Australia
Author: Kear, Benjamin Philip
Citation: Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 2006; 26 (1):196-199
Publisher: Society Vertebrate Paleontolgy
Issue Date: 2006
ISSN: 0272-4634
School/Discipline: School of Earth and Environmental Sciences
Abstract: Australian plesiosaur remains are common although currently poorly documented. At present, most of the described material is derived from extensive Early Cretaceous epicontinental marine rocks in central and northeastern Australia (Kear, 2003). In recent years, however, a number of fragmentary specimens have been recovered from Lower Cretaceous non-marine sequences in the southeastern part of the continent (Fig. 1). The fossil-producing strata are included within the middle Valanginian– early Albian Wonthaggi (Gippsland Basin) and Eumeralla (Otway Basin) formations, southern Victoria, and early–middle Albian Griman Creek Formation (Surat Basin), Lightning Ridge, New South Wales/ Surat region, Queensland. Interestingly, these units were deposited in an Early Cretaceous high-latitude zone (60–80º S), subject to highly seasonal, cool to cold conditions and months of winter darkness near the southern pole. Fossils recorded include a diverse range of freshwater/ terrestrial vertebrates, non-marine invertebrates, and plants (see Dettmann et al., 1992 for summary). Although several previous reports have mentioned plesiosaur material from southeastern Australia (e.g. Rich et al., 1988; Rich and Rich, 1989; Vickers-Rich, 1996; Smith, 1999; Rich and Vickers-Rich, 2000; Kear, 2003), none of the remains have yet been described. It is therefore, the purpose of this paper to present an up-to-date summary of the existing specimens (Table 1) and assess their taxonomic and paleoecological implications.
Appears in Collections:Earth and Environmental Sciences publications

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