Dineley, D. & Metcalf, S. GCR Editor: D. Palmer. 1999. Fossil Fishes of Great Britain. Geological Conservation Review Series No. 16. JNCC, Peterborough, ISBN 1 86107 470 0. The original source material for these web pages has been made available by the JNCC under the Open Government Licence 3.0. Full details in the JNCC Open Data Policy
Hastings
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Highlights
The Early Cretaceous sandstones and shales that crop out along the East Sussex coast and foreshore east of Hastings have been famous for 100 years for specimens of fossil selachians and bony fishes. More recent discoveries include rare microvertebrate remains concentrated in the Cliff End Bone Bed, one of the richest bone accumulations in the Weald.
Introduction
The Hastings Beds (Early Cretaceous: Valanginian;
In the Hastings area, vertebrate-rich levels also occur within the thin sandstones and conglomeratic horizons. One such accumulation, the Cliff End Bone Bed, is particularly well known and the faunal assemblage, which includes abundant fish remains in association with rarer reptilian and mammalian material, has formed the basis of several reports on Wealden palaeoecology and taphonomy (e.g. Allen, 1949; Cook, 1995). The hybodont, 'Lonchidium' rhizion (Patterson, 1966), was described from the Cliff End Bone Bed. At the type locality at Cliff End (
The stratigraphy of the Wealden of Hastings has been described by several authors (e.g. Beckles, 1856; Topley, 1875; White, 1928; Allen, 1976; Lake and Shephard-Thorn, 1987). The palaeoecological implications of the Cliff End Bone Bed have been described by Allen (1949, 1967), Clemens and Lees (1971) and Cook (1995).
Description
The geology of the coastal cliff sections around Hastings
Thickness (m) | |
Hastings Beds | up to 50 |
Tunbridge Wells Sand | |
Fine grained, yellowish sandstones and silts with impersistent seams of mottled silty clay | |
Wadhurst Clay | 50–57 |
Grey-green calcareous shales interlaminated with thin siltstones. Also: calcareous sandstone bed (Tilgate Stone), sandstone channel fills, soils and near the base | |
Cliff End Bone Bed | |
Cliff End Sandstone | |
Top Ashdown Pebble Bed | 10 |
Ashdown Beds | |
The upper 30–50 m are chiefly sandstone, while the strata below are dominantly massive mottled sphaerosiderite sandstone beds Near the base: | 180–200 |
Lee Ness Sandstone | 1–2 |
Most of the fish finds have been made from the Wadhurst Clay at Hastings, East Cliff and Cliff End. However, some remains, including specimens of Lepidotes spp. and Hybodus spp., have also been found in the underlying Ashdown Beds exposed in the cliffs at East Cliff Hastings, Cliff End and Fairlight Cove (White, 1928). The Wadhurst Clay comprises a thick succession of clays, with interbeds of siltstone, sandstone, shelly limestone and thin conglomerates. The sequence becomes more arenaceous around Hastings and the coastal sections in this region are characterized by the thick and prominent Cliff End Sandstone, capped by the Cliff End Pebble Bed conglomerate. The Cliff End Bone Bed is laterally impersistent along the coastal section and may be equivalent to the pebble bed
Vertebrate material is generally common throughout the Wadhurst Clay sequence, but specific bone beds are confined to east Sussex and parts of Kent (Allen, 1949). Two types of bone-rich accumulations are recognized in the Wadhurst Clay (Allen, 1949): the first are lenticular units of muddy sandstone (e.g. Brede Bone Bed); the other typically poorly sorted, cross-bedded conglomerates and pebbly sandstones, to which the Cliff End accumulation belongs. The Cliff End Bone Bed has been noted in inland sections, around Hastings, Rye and Guestling (White, 1928), and is thought to correspond with the Telham Bone Bed horizon exposed near Battle (e.g. Topley, 1875; Lake and Shephard-Thorn, 1987). Allen (1949) regarded the bone bed as a correlatable event horizon, restricted to the most eastern part of East Sussex and neighbouring parts of Kent, and lying on top of the 'Tilgate Stone' horizon (Lake and Shephard-Thorn, 1987, p. 28).
The Cliff End Bone Bed is a pale grey, coarse quartzose sandstone with a calcareous cement, about 0.2 m thick in its type locality. The unit is poorly sorted and contains sub-angular to well-rounded pebbles (up to 2 mm in diameter). Approximately 97% of the clasts are quartz. The remainder are sandstone pebbles and ferruginous claystone nodules, vertebrate debris and fossilized wood (Cook, 1995). Vertebrate material has been recovered by acid separation techniques and includes actinopterygian scales and teeth, shark teeth, along with rarer reptilian remains and mammalian teeth. The fauna and sampling methods are reviewed by Clemens (1963), Clemens and Lees (1971) and Cook (1995).
Dissociated vertebrate remains are scattered throughout the fossiliferous unit and all specimens show some fragmentation (Cook, 1995). Much of the material is heavily abraded and the bone bed is thought to have accumulated under a high-energy flow regime, and represents a winnowed channel lag deposit (Cook, 1995).
Fauna
The Hastings fish fauna
Chondrichthyes: Elasmobranchii: Euselachii: Hybodontoidea
Hybodus ensis Woodward, 1911
H. basanus Egerton, 1845
H. parvidens Woodward, 1889
H. brevicostatus Patterson, 1966
Hybodus sp.
Hylaeobatis ornata (Woodward, 1889)
'Lonchidion' rhizion (Patterson, 1966) nomen dubium
Lissodus breve breve Patterson, 1966
L. (L.) beterodon Patterson, 1966
Osteichthyes: Actinopterygii: Neopterygii
Coccolepis sp.
Osteichthyes: Actinopterygii: Neopterygii: Halecostomi
Lepidotes mantelli Agassiz, 1833–1837
Coelodus mantelli (Agassiz, 1839–1844)
C. hirudo (Agassiz, 1839)
Interpretation
The palaeoenvironment of the Wadhurst Clay has been interpreted as pro-deltaic or lagoonal (Lake and Shephard-Thorn, 1987). The deposition of the Wealden of the Weald had formerly been interpreted as largely deltaic (e.g. Allen, 1959, 1962; Taylor, 1963), but P. Allen (1976, 1981a) revised his former theory in favour of a model in which the normal Wealden environment was a variable-salinity mudplain, periodically transformed into a sandy braidplain by powerful overloaded streams, the salinity changes being controlled by the rate of freshwater runoff. Allen (1981a) argued that many of the rivers were braided in their proximal portions, whereas Stewart (1981a, 1981b, 1983) emphasized evidence for meandering streams.
Allen (1976) interpreted the Wadhurst Clay pebble bed facies in terms of reworking of fluvial lags by non-marine transgressions across the low-lying Wealden floodplain. The Cliff End Bone Bed was interpreted as a high-energy lag deposit by Allen (1949) and Cook (1995), in which the vertebrate elements suffered several cycles of reworking and transportation.
The fish fauna from the Hastings district is largely represented by isolated skeletal elements and teeth of hybodont sharks and holostean-grade bony fish. The hybodonts are represented by at least four species of Hybodus, and Hastings is the type locality for one of these, H. parvidens Woodward, 1889
The bony fish assemblage is largely composed of halecostomids, including teeth and scales of the ubiquitous Lepidotes mantelli Agassiz, 1833–1837, and type material of two species of the pycnodont Coelodus. Coelodus mantelli (Agassiz, 1839–1844) is represented by dentition and jaws and C. hirudo (Agassiz, 1839–1844) by isolated teeth, from the Wadhurst Clay of the Hastings area (Woodward, 1915–19). The crush ing dentition of the former species is a common find in the Wealden of Sussex, comprising five rows of teeth on the vomer and three rows on the splenial, representing a moderate-sized form.
An imperfect maxilla, possibly representing that of a species of Coccolepis, one of the last known members of the primitive actinopterygians first encountered in the Scottish Upper Devonian and Carboniferous localities, has been recovered from the Wadhurst Clay succession at Hastings (Woodward, 1915–19).
Comparison with other localities
The Cliff End Bone Bed is exposed (Lake and Shephard-Thorn, 1987) near the steps from the Undercliff to Watchbell Street, Rye [TQ 91 95 2018], and formerly in a brickpit near Baldslow
Many nearly complete fossil fish specimens were recovered from the foreshore and beach along the coast between Bexhill-on-Sea and Cooden, East Sussex (
Conclusion
The Hastings succession is the only extensive coastal setting in the non-marine strata of the Hastings Beds undergoing active erosion, and therefore has considerable potential for future finds. The conservation value of the site is derived from the wealth of fossil fishes obtained from the section over the last 100 years, including two type specimens of hybodont sharks and two of the pycnodont Coelodus. One of the last basal actinopterygians, Coccolepis, has also been recovered from these beds. The fish debris rich horizons — such as the Cliff End Bone Bed — may yield new microvertebrates.