Mandagery Sandstone Explained

Mandagery Sandstone
Period:Late Devonian
Type:Geological formation
Prilithology:Sandstone, Siltstone
Unitof:Nangar Subgroup, Hervey Group
Underlies:Pipe Formation
Overlies:Kadina Formation
Location:Canowindra, New South Wales
Region:New South Wales

The Mandagery Sandstone is a Late Devonian geological formation in New South Wales, Australia. It is one of several famed Australian lagerstätten, with thousands of exceptional fish fossils found at a site near the town of Canowindra.

A sandstone block containing 114 fish was discovered in 1956 about 10 km west of Canowindra, on the road to Gooloogong. The Canowindra site was rediscovered by paleontologist Alex Ritchie in 1993, and over 3000 fish fossils have been catalogued and stored at the Australian Museum in Sydney[1] and the local Age of Fishes Museum in Canowindra. Antiarch placoderms make up the majority of specimens recovered; Bothriolepis and Remigolepis are the most abundant fossils, followed by the arthrodire Groenlandaspis. About 20 sarcopterygian (lobe-finned fish) fossils have also been found, including new taxa such as Canowindra, Mandageria, Cabonnichthys,[2] Soederberghia and Gooloogongia.[3] Fossils are preserved as natural moulds in the hard sandstone, filled by a mixture of sandstone, clay, and rare fragments of remaining bone. The detail of preservation is high, with individual armor plates, scales, and the internal structures of major bones all visible in latex casts produced from the moulds.[4] [5]

The Mandagery Sandstone is part of the Hervey Group, a cluster of deformed Paleozoic sediments located near the center of the Lachlan Fold Belt in New South Wales. It is mostly fine-grained red orthoquartzite sandstone, arranged into a number of short sequences. Towards the top of each sequence, the red sandstone is supplanted by thin beds of white sandstone and red siltstone. Cross-bedding and mudcracks indicate that the sandstone was deposited close to the shore.[6]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Johanson . Zerina . Ahlberg . Per Erik . 1997 . A new tristichopterid (Osteolepiformes: Sarcopterygii) from the Mandagery Sandstone (Late Devonian, Famennian) near Canowindra, NSW, Australia . Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh: Earth Sciences . en . 88 . 1 . 39–68 . 10.1017/S0263593300002303 . 130382171 . 0263-5933.
  2. Ahlberg . Per E. . Johanson . Zerina . 1997-12-15 . Second tristichopterid (Sarcopterygii, Osteolepiformes) from the Upper Devonian of Canowindra, New South Wales, Australia, and phylogeny of the Tristichopteridae . Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology . en . 17 . 4 . 653–673 . 10.1080/02724634.1997.10011015 . 1997JVPal..17..653A . 0272-4634.
  3. Johanson . Zerina . Ahlberg . Per E. . 1998 . A complete primitive rhizodont from Australia . Nature . en . 394 . 6693 . 569–573 . 10.1038/29058 . 1998Natur.394..569J . 4401180 . 1476-4687.
  4. Johanson . Zerina . 1997 . New Remigolepis (Placodermi; Antiarchi) from Canowindra, New South Wales, Australia . Geological Magazine . en . 134 . 6 . 813–846 . 10.1017/S0016756897007838 . 1997GeoM..134..813J . 140654404 . 0016-7568.
  5. Ahlberg . Per E. . Johanson . Zerina . Daeschler . Edward B. . 2001-03-26 . The late Devonian lungfish Soederberghia (Sarcopterygii, Dipnoi) from Australia and North America, and its biogeographical implications . Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology . en . 21 . 1 . 1–12 . 10.1671/0272-4634(2001)021[0001:TLDLSS]2.0.CO;2 . 130513725 . 0272-4634.
  6. Conolly . J. R. . 1965 . Petrology and origin of the Hervey group, upper devonian, Central New South Wales . Journal of the Geological Society of Australia . en . 12 . 1 . 123–166 . 10.1080/00167616508728589 . 1965AuJES..12..123C . 0016-7614.