The Lealt Shale Formation is known for its superb preservation of aragonitic molluscs. As fish otoliths are primarily composed of aragonite, and because of the semi-stable nature of this polymorph, records of otoliths become increasingly rare in deep time. Therefore, the Lealt Shale Formation provides a window through which to expand knowledge of Middle Jurassic otoliths. A total of 753 otoliths have been collected, representing 10 species: three in Archaeotolithus, five in Leptolepis, one Archengraulis and a teleost incertae sedis (juveniles only). Four species are new: Archaeotolithus eiggensis, Archaeotolithus invernizziae, Leptolepis flexuosus and Leptolepis skyensis. Two species remain in open nomenclature and the remaining species are known from the Middle Jurassic of southern England and continental Europe: Archaeotolithus doppelsteini, Leptolepis densus, Leptolepis rotundatus and Archengraulis productus. The Lealt Shale Formation was deposited in a low-salinity lagoonal environment with variable freshwater influx and a probably tenuous link to marine waters, resulting in a complex palaeosalinity history. The relevance of the specific environment for the composition of the fish fauna as documented by otoliths is discussed. The evolution of the otolith morphospace during the Jurassic is discussed in the light of the new finds.
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Research Article|
July 04, 2024
Otoliths from the Lealt Shale Formation, Great Estuarine Group, Middle Jurassic (Bathonian), Inner Hebrides, Scotland
Werner W. Schwarzhans;
Werner W. Schwarzhans
1
Zoological Museum, Natural History Museum of Denmark
, Universitetsparken 15
, 2100 Copenhagen Ø, Denmark
2
Ahrensburger Weg 103
, 22359 Hamburg, Germany
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Matthew I. Wakefield
Matthew I. Wakefield
*
3
Lealt Stratigraphical Consultants Limited, The Stables, Moneys Farm
, Bottle Lane
, Mattingley RG27 8LJ, UK
*
Correspondence: [email protected]
Search for other works by this author on:
Werner W. Schwarzhans
1
Zoological Museum, Natural History Museum of Denmark
, Universitetsparken 15
, 2100 Copenhagen Ø, Denmark
2
Ahrensburger Weg 103
, 22359 Hamburg, Germany
Matthew I. Wakefield
*
3
Lealt Stratigraphical Consultants Limited, The Stables, Moneys Farm
, Bottle Lane
, Mattingley RG27 8LJ, UK
*
Correspondence: [email protected]
Publisher: Geological Society of London
Received:
12 Feb 2024
Revision Received:
13 May 2024
Accepted:
20 May 2024
First Online:
24 May 2024
Online ISSN: 2041-4951
Print ISSN: 0036-9276
© 2024 The Author(s). Published by The Geological Society of London for EGS and GSG. All rights reserved
© 2024 The Author(s)
Scottish Journal of Geology (2024) 60 (2): sjg2024-002.
Article history
Received:
12 Feb 2024
Revision Received:
13 May 2024
Accepted:
20 May 2024
First Online:
24 May 2024
Citation
Werner W. Schwarzhans, Matthew I. Wakefield; Otoliths from the Lealt Shale Formation, Great Estuarine Group, Middle Jurassic (Bathonian), Inner Hebrides, Scotland. Scottish Journal of Geology 2024;; 60 (2): sjg2024–002. doi: https://doi.org/10.1144/sjg2024-002
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Index Terms/Descriptors
- Actinopterygii
- aragonite
- Bathonian
- biologic evolution
- biostratigraphy
- carbonates
- Chordata
- depositional environment
- England
- Europe
- fish
- fresh-water environment
- Great Britain
- Hebrides
- Inner Hebrides
- Jurassic
- lagoonal environment
- marine environment
- Mesozoic
- Middle Jurassic
- morphology
- new taxa
- Osteichthyes
- otoliths
- paleoenvironment
- paleosalinity
- preservation
- Scotland
- taxonomy
- Teleostei
- United Kingdom
- Vertebrata
- Western Europe
- Great Estuarine Group
- Leptolepis
- Lealt Shale Formation
- Kildonnan Member
- Archengraulis
- Lonfearn Member
- Leptolepis rotundatus
- Archaeotolithus
- Leptolepis skyensis
- Archengraulis productus
- Leptolepis flexuosus
- Archaeotolithus eiggensis
- Archaeotolithus invernizziae
- Leptolepis densus
- Archaeotolithus doppelsteini
Latitude & Longitude
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