Castle Hayne Limestone Explained

Castle Hayne Limestone
Type:Formation
Age:Lutetian/early Bartonian,
Period:Eocene
Prilithology:limestone
Otherlithology:marl
Namedfor:Castle Hayne, North Carolina
Unitof:Jackson Group
Subunits:New Hanover Member, Comfort Member, Spring Garden Member

The Castle Hayne Limestone (also called the Castle Hayne Formation) is a middle Eocene-aged geologic formation in North Carolina, USA.[1] It consists of cobble to pebble sized clasts, usually rounded, coated with phosphate and glauconite in a limestone matrix. The formation has been dated to the middle Eocene, but its exact age remains uncertain; however, it is generally thought to date to the Lutetian or early Bartonian.[2]

Description

The Castle Hayne Formation is divided into three submembers: the New Hanover member, the Comfort Member, and the Spring Garden Member.[3] The New Hanover member is the oldest member and is characterizes by cobbles and pebbles, fine sand, glauconite, and phosphate in a fine limestone matrix. The most common fossils are shark and ray teeth. Index fossils place this member in the middle Eocene. The Comfort member lies above the New Hanover member. It contains bryozoa and sea urchin fossils and beds of glauconite and phosphate pebbles that mark breaks in deposition. The Comfort member was deposited in the late middle Eocene and is overlain by the Spring Garden member. The Spring Garden member is a siliceous rock cemented with calcite and containing detrital phosphate. Mollusc bivalves account for up to 75% of the composition in some areas and molds of molluscs shells filled with silica are common. Index fossils indicate this member was also deposited in the late middle Eocene.

Vertebrate paleobiota

Based on the Paleobiology Database:[4]

Cartilaginous fish

Sharks

Sharks of the Castle Hayne Limestone
GenusSpeciesMemberMaterialNotesImages
AnomotodonA. novusA goblin shark.
BrachycarchariasB. koertiA sand shark.
Macrorhizodus M. americanus (=Isurus americanus)[5] A lamnid mackerel shark.
OdontaspisO. sp.A sand shark.
OtodusO. angustidensA megatooth shark.
StriatolamiaS. macrotaA goblin shark.

Rays

Rays of the Castle Hayne Limestone
GenusSpeciesMemberMaterialNotesImages
Dasyatidae indet.A whiptail stingray of uncertain affinities.
MyliobatisM. sp.An eagle ray.
PristisP. curvidensA sawfish.
RhinopteraR. sp.A cownose ray.

Ray-finned fish

Ray-finned fish of the Castle Hayne Limestone
GenusSpeciesMemberMaterialNotesImages
Carangidae indet.A jackfish.
CylindracanthusC. sp.RostraA fish of uncertain affinities.
XiphiorhynchusX. antiquusA xiphiid billfish, related to modern swordfish.

Mammals

Cetaceans

Cetaceans of the Castle Hayne Limestone
GenusSpeciesMemberMaterialNotesImages
CrenatocetusC. rayiComfortA protocetid. Type locality for this genus.[6]
CynthiacetusC. maxwelliA basilosaurid.
PachycetusP. wardiiA basilosaurid.
?Remingtonocetidae indet.A tooth.A potential remingtonocetid. Possibly the first record of this family from North America, and provides evidence that this family had a trans-Atlantic distribution.

Sirenians

Invertebrate paleobiota

Molluscs

[7]

GeneraSpeciesNotesImages
C. sp
Crassatella C. wilcoxiC. spA crassatellid bivalve.
EnsisE. sp
FlemingostreaF. sp
GiganostreaG. trigonalisAn extinct group of oyster.
Glyptoactis G. sp
PanopeaP. spA close relative of the modern geoduck.
PectenP. membranosusAn extinct bivalve that belonged to the same genus as most modern scallops.
PholadomyaP. sp
PlicatulaP. filamentosa
VenericardiaV. sp

Cephalopods

GeneraSpeciesNotesImages
AnomalosaepiaA. vernei

A. mariettani

A. alleni

A. andreane

A. sp

An extinct group of cuttlefish that was also found in Egypt and belonged to the family Anomalosaepiidae.
AturiaA. alabamensisBelongs in its own family: the Aturiidae.
BelopteraB. spAnother extinct group of cuttlefish that was found in several localities in Europe.
ConchorhynchusC. furrusHas not been classified into any specific cephalopod group yet.
EutrephocerasE. carolinensisFirst originated during the Cretaceous period.E. dorbignyanum, a related species.
RhyncolitesR. spR. minimus

R. aturensis

An extinct group of nautiloid that has not yet been classified into any specific family.

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Geolex — CastleHayne publications . 2024-11-16 . ngmdb.usgs.gov.
  2. Uhen . Mark D. . Peredo . Carlos Mauricio . 2021 . The first possible remingtonocetid stem whale from North America . Acta Palaeontologica Polonica . 66 . 1 . 77–83.
  3. Ward . Lauck W. . Lawrence . David R. . Blackwelder . Blake W. . Stratigraphic revision of the middle Eocene, Oligocene, and lower Miocene; Atlantic Coastal Plain of North Carolina . U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin . 1979 . 1457-F. 3–10 . 26 June 2018.
  4. Web site: PBDB Strata Results . 2024-11-16 . Paleobiology Database.
  5. Web site: Macrorhizodus americanus Shark-References . 2024-11-16 . shark-references.com . en.
  6. Web site: PBDB Collection . 2024-11-16 . Paleobiology Database.
  7. Web site: Online Collections North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences. collections.naturalsciences.org. 2016-03-15.