Historically, the Wessex Formation has been called alternately the "Variegated Marls and Sandstones", a name used by W. J. Arkell in his 1947 map of the Isle of Purbeck[2] as well as the "Wealden Marls" [3] It was given its current formal name by Daley and Stewart in 1979.[4]
Stratigraphy and lithology
Introduction
The Wessex Formation forms part of the Wealden Group within the Wessex Basin, an area of subsidence since Permo-Triassic times. The basin is located along southern half of the Isle of Wight and Purbeck, extending offshore into the English Channel. The Wealden Group is also exposed significantly in the Weald Basin, which has a separate stratigraphic succession. The Wealden Group is not widely present elsewhere in Britain, as these areas were tectonic highs where little to no sediment deposition was taking place. The formation has limited exposure as it has been deeply buried beneath the subsequent Lower Greensand. Selbourne and Chalk Groups, as well as being very vulnerable to erosion. It has been exposed at the surface due to the creation of anticlinal structures as a distant effect of the formation of the Pyrenees as part of the Alpine Orogeny during the Paleogene.[5]
Cornubian Massif
The major source rocks for the sediments were from the Cornubian Massif to the west, an upland region roughly equivalent to the extent of Cornwall and Devon, with occasional large dropstones transported in tree roots being found in Wealden sediments over 100 kilometres from where they originated.[6]
The Wessex Formation in the Isle of Purbeck
The exposure in of the Wessex Formation in the Isle of Purbeck is largely confined to a thin belt on the south side of the Purbeck Ridge and is best exposed at Swanage,[7]Lulworth Cove[8] and Worbarrow Bay.[9] One notable persistent horizon within the Purbeck sections of the formation is the "Coarse Quartz Grit", an up to 6 metre thick sequence of conglomeraticironstone, with many beds including numerous centimetre sized subangular to rounded pebbles predominantly of vein derived quartz, hence the name. This horizon is present throughout the Purbeck outcrops of the Wessex Formation.[9] The transition to the Vectis Formation at Swanage is obscured by a landslip.[10]
The Wessex Formation of the Isle of Wight
The Isle of Wight succession has two primary exposures, The major one being the several kilometre long section along the South West coastline around Brighstone Bay, and another smaller exposure on the South East coast near Yaverland. While the formation taken as a whole dates from the Berriasian to the Barremian, only the uppermost part of the formation is exposed on the Isle of Wight. With less than 200 metres of exposed composite stratigraphic thickness, and which dates from Hauterivian to Barremian.[11] A radiometric date has been obtained from the lower part of the succession, estimated to be 127.3 ± 2.7 million years ago.[12] This makes the formation coeval with upper portion of the Weald Clay in the Weald Basin. The primary lithology of the exposed portion of the formation on the Isle of Wight consists of featureless purple-redoverbank mudstone, interbedded with sandstones. The environment of deposition was a floodplain within a narrow, east–west oriented valley.[13] The climate at the time of deposition is considered to be semi-arid, based on the presence of pedogeniccalcretenodules within the mudstones.[14] The "Pine Raft" horizon found near the base of the exposed portion of the formation includes calcitized conifer trunks up to metre in diameter and 2–3 metres long.[15]
Plant debris beds
A notable feature of the formation are the so-called "plant debris beds". These consist of a basal matrix supportedconglomerate, grading upwards into grey mudstone with lignitic plant debris, including large trunk fragments of the extinct conifer Pseudofrenelopsis present in the upper portion. These were formed by sheet flood deposits induced by storms that filled pre-existing topographic lows like oxbow lakes and abandoned channels in the floodplain depositional environment.[16] The debris beds do not form a continuous horizon throughout the formation, but are laterally extensive over tens of metres. Many of the wood fragments in the debris beds are cemented together with large nodules of pyrite, suggesting depositional conditions were anoxic.[17] Most fossils within the formation are associated with the debris beds. Vertebrate fossils are mostly disarticulated individual bones and teeth, suggesting a long subaerial exposure prior to burial, though the bones lack abrasion, suggesting that they had not been significantly transported. Partial skeletons also sometimes occur, but are uncommon. Autochthonous siderite nodules are also present, which encase some of the fossils.[16] Plant debris beds also exist within the Swanage section, and one of these horizons has yielded microvertebrate remains.[10]
"Hypsilophodon bed"
While most fossils are associated with the plant debris beds, a notable exception is the "Hypsilophodon bed" present near the top of the formation, an up to 1 metre thick bed of silty red-green mudstone, with two separate horizons that have produced almost exclusively over a hundred complete and articulated skeletons of the dinosaur Hypsilophodon, sometimes even with preserved tail tendons. The bed is laterally extensive, being persistent for over a kilometre. It has been recently suggested that the accumulation of skeletons were a mass mortality event caused by a crevasse splay. Just above the "Hypsilophodon bed" the red mudstones of the Wessex Formation change to the transitional light coloured sandstone "White rock" and overlying laminated grey mudstones of the Vectis Formation, caused by the changing of environmental conditions from that of a floodplain to coastal lagoon conditions.[18]
Palaeoenvironment
The palaeoenvironment of the Wessex Formation is considered to have been semi-arid, and has variously been compared to chaparral[13] or macchia[10]Mediterraneanshrubland. The dominant trees were conifers of the extinct family Cheirolepidiaceae belonging to the genera Pseudofrenelopsis and Watsoniocladus, both of which have reduced xerophytic leaves adapted to arid conditions.[10] Tree cover is thought to have been thin, and concentrated near waterways.[19] The ground cover is thought to have consisted of xerophytic ferns.[10]Wildfires were common occurrences, as evidenced by preserved charred vegetation.[16]
Fauna
The Wessex Formation likely spans several million years of deposition, and not all taxa are likely to have been contemporaneous.[20]
Invertebrates
Invertebrates are commonly preserved in the Wessex Formation. Freshwater bivalves can be found including unionids such as Margaritifera, Nippononaia, and Unio. These bivalves help reconstruct what the freshwaterpaleoenvironment may have been like during the formation's deposition. Specimens of Viviparus, a genus of freshwater snail, have also been found. While compression fossils of insects are found in the overlying Vectis Formation, all insect fossils in the Wessex Formation are found as inclusions in amber. Amber can be found present as a rare component in plant debris beds in the Wessex formation both on the Isle of Wight and the Isle of Purbeck, however, the only significant concentration and where all of the inclusions have been found is a lag channel in the L6 plant debris horizon just south-east of Chilton Chine. Only four species from the amber have been formally described, Cretamygale chasei a mygalomorph spider, Dungeyella gavini[21]Libanodiamesa simpsoni, both chironomid midges, as well as Embolemopsis maryannae, a embolemid parasitic wasp. However a table of undescribed taxa has been given,[21] and several images of some of the undescribed taxa have been released from various sources, including multiple chironomids, and a thereviddipteran.[22]
Two isolated large middle caudal vertebra, one isolated large cervical vertebra, BMNH R5333, two articulated caudal vertebrae with an articulated fragment of a third
Apparently small. In private collection and undescribed. Referred to as "That Which Cannot Be Named" by Darren Naish[48] Has been suggested to be a tyrannosauroid.[50][31]
Known from a "partial skull roof comprising both frontals and parts of the right postorbital and left orbitosphenoid". A second specimen is known but has not been formally published.
A maniraptoran of uncertain classification, originally identified as an ornithischian.
A lower right molar (NHMUK.M45558) C, an upper left molar (NHMUK.M45564)., a tentatively referred lower left or upper right premolar (NHMUK.M45484)[55]
1: L14 and Yaverland 38 2: Yaverland 38, 3: L2 and Yaverland 38 4,5: Yaverland bed 38 6:L2, L14 and Yaverland 38 7,8,9: Yaverland 38 10: L2, L14 and Yaverland 38
At least 10 distinct taxa represented by isolated teeth, maxilla and lower jaw fragments, some of which are paramacellodids based on the common occurrence of osteoderms typical of this clade.[31]
Xinjiangchelyid, previously known by the synonyms Plesiochelys brodiei Lydekker, 1889; Plesiochelys valdensis Lydekker, 1889 and Plesiochelys vectensis Hooley, 1900[63]
^Arkell, W. J. (1947). "The Geology of the country around Weymouth, Swanage, Corfe and Lulworth". Memoir of the Geological Survey of Great Britain.
^Osbourne White, H. J. (1921). "A short account of the geology of the Isle of Wight". Memoir of the Geological Survey of Great Britain.
^Daley, B.; Stewart, D. J. (1979). "Weekend field meeting: The Wealden Group in the Isle of Wight". Proceedings of the Geologists' Association. 90: 51–54. doi:10.1016/S0016-7878(79)80031-0.
^Hughes, N.F.; McDougall, A.B. (January 1990). "New Wealden correlation for the Wessex Basin". Proceedings of the Geologists' Association. 101 (1): 85–90. doi:10.1016/S0016-7878(08)80208-8.
^ abInsole, Allan N.; Hutt, Stephen (September 1994). "The palaeoecology of the dinosaurs of the Wessex Formation (Wealden Group, Early Cretaceous), Isle of Wight, Southern England". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 112 (1–2): 197–215. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.1994.tb00318.x.
^Robinson, Stuart A.; Andrews, Julian E.; Hesselbo, Stephen P.; Radley, Jonathan D.; Dennis, Paul F.; Harding, Ian C.; Allen, Perce (March 2002). "Atmospheric pCO 2 and depositional environment from stable-isotope geochemistry of calcrete nodules (Barremian, Lower Cretaceous, Wealden Beds, England)". Journal of the Geological Society. 159 (2): 215–224. Bibcode:2002JGSoc.159..215R. doi:10.1144/0016-764901-015. ISSN0016-7649. S2CID55188160.
^Radley, Jonathan D.; Allen, Percival (April 2012). "The Wealden (non-marine Lower Cretaceous) of the Wessex Sub-basin, southern England". Proceedings of the Geologists' Association. 123 (2): 319–373. doi:10.1016/j.pgeola.2012.01.002.
^ abcSweetman, Steven C.; Insole, Allan N. (June 2010). "The plant debris beds of the Early Cretaceous (Barremian) Wessex Formation of the Isle of Wight, southern England: their genesis and palaeontological significance". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 292 (3–4): 409–424. Bibcode:2010PPP...292..409S. doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2010.03.055.
^Radley, Jon D. (January 1994). "Stratigraphy, palaeontology and palaeoenvironment of the Wessex Formation (Wealden Group, Lower Cretaceous) at Yaverland, Isle of Wight, southern England". Proceedings of the Geologists' Association. 105 (3): 199–208. doi:10.1016/S0016-7878(08)80119-8.
^Coram, Robert A.; Radley, Jonathan D.; Martill, David M. (March 2017). "A Cretaceous calamity? The Hypsilophodon Bed of the Isle of Wight, southern England". Geology Today. 33 (2): 66–70. doi:10.1111/gto.12182. S2CID133499912.
^ abJarzembowski, E.; Azar, D.; Nel, A. (2009-04-24). "A new chironomid (Insecta: Diptera) from Wealden amber (Lower Cretaceous) of the Isle of Wight (UK)". Geologica Acta. 6 (3): 285–291. doi:10.1344/105.000000257. ISSN1696-5728.
^Baranov, Viktor; Giłka, Wojciech; Zakrzewska, Marta; Jarzembowski, Edmund (March 2019). "New non-biting midges (Diptera: Chironomidae) from Lower Cretaceous Wealden amber of the Isle of Wight (UK)". Cretaceous Research. 95: 138–145. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2018.11.012. S2CID131766366.
^Legalov, A & A. Jarzembowski, Edmund. (2017). First record of a weevil (Coleoptera: Nemonychidae) from the Lower Cretaceous (Wealden) of southern England. Cretaceous Research. 82. 10.1016/j.cretres.2017.10.006.
^McDonald, Andrew T. (2011). "The status of Dollodon and other basal iguanodonts (Dinosauria: Ornithischia) from the upper Wealden beds (Lower Cretaceous) of Europe". Cretaceous Research. 33: 1–6. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2011.03.002.
^ abcd"Table 13.1," in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 271.
^Campbell, Amy, Paul Upchurch, and Phillip D. Mannion. The anatomy and relationships of Eucamerotus foxi (Dinosauria, Sauropoda) from the Early Cretaceous of England. No. e3247v1. PeerJ Preprints, 2017.
^"Table 13.1," in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 261.
^"Table 13.1," in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 266.
^ ab"Sauropod dinosaurs". Field Guide to English Wealden Fossils. Palaeontological Association. 2011.
^Naish, Darren; Martill, David M.; Cooper, David; Stevens, Kent A. (December 2004). "Europe's largest dinosaur? A giant brachiosaurid cervical vertebra from the Wessex Formation (Early Cretaceous) of southern England". Cretaceous Research. 25 (6): 787–795. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2004.07.002.
^"Table 5.1," in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 112.
^Benson, Roger B. J.; Brusatte, Stephen L.; Hutt, Stephen; Naish, Darren (2009). "A new large basal tetanuran (Dinosauria: Theropoda) from the Wessex Formation (Barremian) of the Isle Of Wight, England". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 29 (2): 612–615. doi:10.1671/039.029.0202. ISSN0272-4634. S2CID83869634.
^"Table 8.1," in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 167.
^FOREY, P. and SWEETMAN S. C. 2011. Bony fishes. 225–235. In Batten D. J. (Ed.) Palaeontological Association Field Guide to Fossils, 14. English Wealden fossils. The Palaeontological Association, London, 769 pp.
^ abSWEETMAN S. C. and HOOKER, J. J. 2011. Mammals. 560–580. In Batten D. J. (Ed.) Palaeontological Association Field Guide to Fossils, 14. English Wealden fossils. The Palaeontological Association, London, 769 pp.
^ abcdeSweetman, S. C. 2006. The tetrapod microbiota of the Wessex Formation (Lower Cretaceous, Barremian) of the Isle of Wight, UK. 127-129. In: Barrett, P. M. and Evans, S. E. (eds.) 2006. Ninth international symposium on Mesozoic terrestrial ecosystems and biota, abstracts and proceedings. 187 pp.
^Salisbury, S.W.; Naish, D. (2011). "Crocodilians". In Batten, D.J. (ed.). English Wealden Fossils. The Palaeontological Association. pp. 305–369.
^Ristevski, Jorgo; Young, Mark T.; de Andrade, Marco Brandalise; Hastings, Alexander K. (April 2018). "A new species of Anteophthalmosuchus (Crocodylomorpha, Goniopholididae) from the Lower Cretaceous of the Isle of Wight, United Kingdom, and a review of the genus". Cretaceous Research. 84: 340–383. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2017.11.008. ISSN0195-6671.
^ abKEAR, B. P. and BARRETT, P. M. (2011), Reassessment of the Lower Cretaceous (Barremian) pliosauroid Leptocleidus superstes Andrews, 1922 and other plesiosaur remains from the nonmarine Wealden succession of southern England. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 161: 663–691. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.2010.00648.x
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