Waipara Greensand Explained

Waipara Greensand
Type:Geological formation
Age:Palaeocene,
~ Selandian-Thanetian
Period:Palaeocene
Prilithology:Sandstone
Namedfor:Waipara River
Country:New Zealand
Coordinates:-43.076°N 172.807°W
Subunits:Mount Ellen Member, Stormmont Member
Underlies:Ashley Mudstone
Overlies:Loburn Formation

The Waipara Greensand is a geological rock unit found in Canterbury, New Zealand. It dates from just after the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event, the Selandian and Thanetian, around 62–58 million years ago in the Palaeocene. It is well known for its fossils, particularly for containing the oldest penguins (Sphenisciformes) and also containing shark and fish fossils.

Geology

The Waipara Greensand is a fine to medium-grained, richly glauconitic quartzose sandstone. It crops out throughout North Canterbury. It has been interpreted as having been deposited in a shallow marine setting under conditions of very slow sedimentation. It is deepest in the Waipara River area, where it reaches a thickness of about, thinning to the south and north.[1]

The Waipara Greensand are Thanetian and Selandian in age (62 to 58 Mya). The top of the Waipara Greensand marks the Teurian–Waipawan New Zealand stage boundary, which is correlated internationally with the Paleocene-Eocene boundary.

Fossils

The Waipara Greensand is only sparsely fossiliferous, but there are some significant discoveries made from this rock unit. There have been at least at least 16 neoselachian sharks found, including Chlamydoselachus keyesi and Centroselachus goord, as well as the enigmatic Waiparaconus, which is either a barnacle or a coelenterate,[2] the remains of two species of proto‐penguin Waimanu and Muriwaimanu,[3] Clymenoptilon, an early tropicbird,[4] rarely also fish bones and poorly preserved molluscs. Nanofossils include two key age‐diagnostic taxa, Chiasmolithus bidens and Hornbrookina teuriensis.[5]

The majority of shark specimens were recovered from loose weathered material that accumulates at the foot of steep banks along the Waipara River. Gypsum often encrusts the teeth, making identification difficult.

Notes and References

  1. Browne, G.H. and Field, B.D. 1985. Lithostratigraphy of Late Cretaceous to Early Pleistocene rocks of northern Canterbury, New Zealand. New Zealand Geological Survey Record, 6, 1–63.
  2. Buckeridge, J. S. 1993. A re‐evaluation of the Gondwanan invertebrate Waiparaconus as a coelenterate. Records of the Western Australian Museum, 16, 221– 233.
  3. Fordyce, R.E. and Jones, C.M. 1990. The history of penguins and new fossil penguin material from New Zealand. 419–446. In Davis, L.S. and Darby, J.T. (eds). Penguin biology III. Academic Press, San Diego, 467 pp.
  4. News: Zealandia fossil find may turn historical record on its head . Michael . Daly . 3 September 2023 . . 3 September 2023.
  5. Mannering, A. A., and N. Hiller. 2008. An early Cenozoic neoselachianshark fauna from the southwest Pacific. Palaeontology 51:1341–1365.