Title: Australasian Fossils: A Students' Manual of Palaeontology
Author: Frederick Chapman
Author of introduction, etc.: Ernest Willington Skeats
Release date: March 16, 2019 [eBook #59074]
Language: English
Credits: Produced by MFR, Tom Cosmas and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
produced from images generously made available by The
Internet Archive)
BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
The Foraminifera
An Introduction to the Study of the Protozoa
by
FREDERICK CHAPMAN, A.L.S., F.R.M.S.
This book has been written with a view of
meeting a demand which has arisen for a concise
account of the Foraminifera, suited to the
requirements of the student of Natural History
and Palaeontology.
With 14 plates and 42 illustrations in the Text.
DEMY 8vo. CLOTH, 10s. 6d.
A FOSSIL CRINOID
(Helicocrinus plumosus), about 5/6 nat. size,
in Silurian Mudstone, Brunswick, Victoria.
(Spec. in Nat. Mus., Melbourne).
A Students’ Manual of Palaeontology
Palaeontologist to the National Museum, Melbourne.
Formerly Assistant in the Geological Department of the Royal College of Science, London.
Assoc. Linnean Soc. [Lond.], F.R.M.S., etc.
Author of “The Foraminifera,” “A Monograph of the Silurian Bivalved Mollusca of Victoria,” “New or Little-known Victorian Fossils in the National Museum,” etc.
With an Introduction by
PROFESSOR E. W. SKEATS, D.Sc., F.G.S.
GEORGE ROBERTSON & COMPANY PROPY. LTD.,
Melbourne, Sydney, Adelaide, Brisbane and London.
1914.
| Page | |||
| Preface | 10 | ||
| Introduction by Professor E. W. Skeats, D.Sc., F.G.S. | 13 | ||
PART I.—GENERAL PRINCIPLES. |
|||
| Chap. | I. | —Nature and uses of Fossils | 21 |
| " | II. | —Classification of Fossil Animals and Plants | 34 |
| " | III. | —The Geological Epochs and Time-range of Fossils | 41 |
| " | IV. | —How Fossils are Found, and the Rocks They Form | 51 |
PART II.—SYSTEMATIC PALAEONTOLOGY. |
|||
| Chap. | V. | —Fossil Plants | 82 |
| " | VI. | —Fossil Foraminifera and Radiolaria | 95 |
| " | VII. | —Fossil Sponges, Corals and Graptolites | 107 |
| " | VIII. | —Fossil Starfishes, Sea-lilies and Sea-urchins | 133 |
| " | IX. | —Fossil Worms, Sea-mats and Lamp-shells | 152 |
| " | X. | —Fossil Shell-fish | 174 |
| " | XI. | —Fossil Trilobites, Crustacea and Insects | 220 |
| " | XII. | —Fossil Fishes, Amphibians, Reptiles, Birds and Mammals | 257 |
| Appendix.—Notes on Collecting and Preserving Fossils | 315 | ||
| Index | 321 | ||
| Fig. | Page | |
| 1. | Fossil Shells in clay | 22 |
| 2. | Tracks, probably of Crustaceans | 22 |
| 3. | Structure of Silicified Wood in tangential section: Araucarioxylon Daintreei, Chapm. | 24 |
| 4. | Portrait of William Smith | 26 |
| 5. | Raised Beach: Brighton, England | 28 |
| 6. | Raised Beach: Torquay, Victoria | 28 |
| 7. | Marine Fossils in Volcanic Tuff: Summit of Snowdon | 29 |
| 8. | Kitchen Middens: Torquay, Victoria | 30 |
| 9. | Submerged Forest on the Cheshire Coast | 30 |
| 10. | Pecten murrayanus, Tate. A fossil shell allied to a living species | 32 |
| 11. | Cliff section: Torquay, Victoria | 42 |
| 12. | Diagram of superposition of Strata | 42 |
| 13. | Diagram of the Range-in-time of Australasian Fossils | 50 |
| 14. | Diprotodon skeletons in situ: Lake Callabonna, S. Australia | 51 |
| 15. | Bird remains on sand dunes: King Island, Bass Strait | 52 |
| 16. | Impression of Bird’s feather in Ironstone: Western Victoria | 52 |
| 17. | A Fossil Turtle: Notochelone costata, Owen sp. | 52 |
| 18. | A Ganoid Fish: Pristisomus crassus, A. S. Woodward | 54 |
| 19. | A fossil Insect in amber (Tipula sp.) | 54 |
| 20. | A fossil Crustacean: Thalassina emerii, Bell | 55 |
| 21. | An Ammonite: Desmoceras flindersi, McCoy sp. | 55 |
| 22. | Belemnites: Belemnites diptycha, McCoy | 56 |
| 23. | A Group of Lamp-shells: Magellania flavescens, Lam. sp. | 56 |
| 24. | Zoarium of a living Polyzoan: Retepora sp. | 58 |
| 25. | A fossil Polyzoan: Macropora clarkei, T. Woods sp. | 58 |
| 26. | Fossil Worm-tubes: (?) Serpula | 60 |
| 27. | A living Sea-urchin: Strongylocentrotus erythrogrammus, Val. | 60 |
| 28. | A fossil Sea-urchin: Linthia antiaustrails, Tate | 60 |
| 29. | A fossil Brittle-Star: Ophioderma egertoni, Brod. sp. | 60 |
| 30. | A fossil Crinoid: Taxocrinus simplex, Phillips sp. | 62 |
| 31. | Graptolites on Slate: Tetragraptus fruticosus, J. Hall sp. | 62 |
| 32. | A Stromatoporoid: Actinostroma | 63 |
| 33. | Corals in Devonian Marble: Favosites | 64 |
| 34. | Siliceous Skeleton of a living Sponge: (?) Chonelasma | 64 |
| 35. | Spicules of a fossil Sponge: Ecionema newberyi, McCoy sp. | 65 |
| 36. | Nummulites: N. gizehensis, Ehr. var. champollioni, De la Harpe | 65 |
| 37. | Cainozoic Radiolaria | 66 |
| 38. | Radiolaria in Siliceous Limestone | 67 |
| 39. | Travertin Limestone, with leaves of Beech (Fagus) | 67 |
| 40. | Freshwater Limestone with shells (Bulinus) | 68 |
| 41. | Hardened mudstone with Brachiopods (Orthis, etc.) | 69 |
| 42. | Diatomaceous Earth | 72 |
| 43. | Lepidocyclina Limestone | 73 |
| 44. | Coral in Limestone: Favosites grandipora, Eth. fil. | 74 |
| 45. | Crinoidal Limestone | 74 |
| 46. | Turritella Limestone | 75 |
| 47. | Ostracodal Limestone | 75 |
| 48. | Halimeda Limestone | 77 |
| 49. | Tasmanite: a Spore Coal | 77 |
| 50. | Kerosene Shale | 77 |
| 51. | Bone Bed | 77 |
| 52. | Bone Breccia | 79 |
| 53. | Cainozoic Ironstone with Leaves (Banksia) | 80 |
| 54. | Girvanella conferta, Chapm., in Silurian Limestone | 83 |
| 55. | Palaeozoic Plants | 83 |
| 56. | Restoration of Lepidodendron | 84 |
| 57. | Stem of Lepidodendron (Lepidophloios), showing leaf-scars | 84 |
| 58. | Upper Palaeozoic Plants | 85 |
| 59. | Map of Gondwana-Land | 87 |
| 60. | Mesozoic Plants | 88 |
| 61. | Cainozoic Plants | 90 |
| 62. | Eucalyptus leaves from the Deep Leads | 92 |
| 63. | Palaeozoic and Mesozoic Foraminifera | 97 |
| 64. | Lepidocyclina marginata, Mich. sp. Sections of shell showing structure | 99 |
| 65. | Cainozoic Foraminifera | 100 |
| 66. | Fossil Radiolaria | 103 |
| 67. | Palaeozoic Sponges and Archaeocyathinae | 108 |
| 68. | Cainozoic Sponges | 111 |
| 69. | Silurian Corals | 111 |
| 70. | Upper Palaeozoic Corals | 116 |
| 71. | Cainozoic Corals | 118 |
| 72. | Stromatoporoidea and Cladophora | 121 |
| 73. | Lower Ordovician Graptolites | 125 |
| 74. | Lower Ordovician Graptolites | 125 |
| 75. | Upper Ordovician and Silurian Graptolites | 127 |
| 76. | Fossil Crinoids | 135 |
| 77. | Fossil Starfishes | 140 |
| 78. | Protaster brisingoides, Gregory, in Silurian Sandstone | 142 |
| 79. | Gregoriura spryi, Chapm., in Silurian Mudstone | 143 |
| 80. | Cainozoic Sea-urchins | 145 |
| 81. | Cainozoic Sea-urchins | 147 |
| 82. | Fossil Worms | 153 |
| 83. | Palaeozoic Polyzoa | 156 |
| 84. | Cainozoic Polyzoa | 157 |
| 85. | Lower Palaeozoic Brachiopods | 159 |
| 86. | Silurian and Devonian Brachiopods | 161 |
| 87. | Carbopermian Brachiopods | 163 |
| 88. | Mesozoic Brachiopods | 165 |
| 89. | Cainozoic Brachiopods | 167 |
| 90. | Lower Palaeozoic Bivalves | 176 |
| 91. | Palaeozoic Bivalves | 179 |
| 92. | Carbopermian Bivalves | 180 |
| 93. | Lower Mesozoic Bivalves | 181 |
| 94. | Cretaceous Bivalves | 183 |
| 95. | Cainozoic Bivalves | 185 |
| 96. | Cainozoic Bivalves | 186 |
| 97. | Fossil Scaphopods and Chitons | 188 |
| 98. | Lower Palaeozoic Gasteropoda | 192 |
| 99. | Silurian Gasteropoda | 194 |
| 100. | Upper Palaeozoic Gasteropoda | 195 |
| 101. | Mesozoic Gasteropoda | 197 |
| 102. | Cainozoic Gasteropoda | 199 |
| 103. | Cainozoic Gasteropoda | 200 |
| 104. | Late Cainozoic and Pleistocene Gasteropoda | 201 |
| 105. | Palaeozoic Cephalopoda | 206 |
| 106. | Mesozoic and Cainozoic Cephalopoda | 208 |
| 107. | Diagram restoration of an Australian Trilobite (Dalmanites) | 224 |
| 108. | Cambrian Trilobites | 226 |
| 109. | Older Silurian Trilobites | 228 |
| 110. | Newer Silurian Trilobites | 230 |
| 111. | Carboniferous Trilobites and a Phyllopod | 232 |
| 112. | Silurian Ostracoda | 236 |
| 113. | Upper Palaeozoic and Mesozoic Ostracoda | 238 |
| 114. | Cainozoic Ostracoda | 239 |
| 115. | Fossil Cirripedes | 242 |
| 116. | Cirripedes. Lepas anatifera, Linn.: living goose barnacle, and L. pritchardi, Hall: Cainozoic | 242 |
| 117. | Ceratiocaris papilio, Salter | 244 |
| 118. | Ordovician Phyllocarids | 245 |
| 119. | Silurian Phyllocarids | 245 |
| 120. | Fossil Crabs and Insects | 247 |
| 121. | Silurian Eurypterids | 249 |
| 122. | Thyestes magnificus, Chapm. | 259 |
| 123. | Gyracanthides murrayi, A. S. Woodw. Restoration | 260 |
| 124. | Teeth and Scales of Palaeozoic and Mesozoic Fishes | 260 |
| 125. | Cleithrolepis granulatus, Egerton | 263 |
| 126. | Tooth of Ceratodus avus, A. S. W., and phalangeal of a carnivorous Deinosaur | 264 |
| 127. | Scale of Ceratodus ? avus | 265 |
| 128. | The Queensland Lung-fish: Neoceratodus forsteri, Krefft | 266 |
| 129. | Leptolepis gregarius, A. S. W. | 266 |
| 130. | Cretaceous and Cainozoic Fish-teeth | 268 |
| 131. | Cainozoic Fish remains | 270 |
| 132. | Bothriceps major, A. S. W. | 273 |
| 133. | Ichthyosaurus australis, McCoy | 277 |
| 134. | Fossil Reptiles | 278 |
| 135. | Impression of Bird’s feather, magnified, Cainozoic: Victoria | 281 |
| 136. | Cnemiornis calcitrans, Owen | 284 |
| 137. | Dinornis maximus, Owen. Great Moa | 284 |
| 138. | Pachyornis elephantopus, Owen | 285 |
| 139. | Skeleton of Sarcophilus ursinus, Harris sp. | 288 |
| 140. | Skull of fossil specimen of Sarcophilus ursinus | 288 |
| 141. | Thylacinus major, Owen. Hind part of mandible | 289 |
| 142. | Phascolomys pliocenus, McCoy. Mandible | 290 |
| 143. | Cainozoic Teeth and Otolith | 291 |
| 144. | Skeleton of Diprotodon australis, Owen | 291 |
| 145. | Right hind foot of Diprotodon australis | 292 |
| 146. | Restoration of Diprotodon australis | 292 |
| 147. | Skull and mandible of Thylacoleo carnifex, Owen | 293 |
| 148. | Wynyardia bassiana, Spencer | 294 |
| 149. | Tooth of Scaldicetus macgeei, Chapm. | 297 |
| 150. | Impressions of footprints in dune sand-rock, Warrnambool | 301 |
| Map of Australia, showing chief fossiliferous localities | Map |
The more important discoveries of fossils in the southern hemisphere have received, as a rule, very meagre notice in many of the text-books of Geology and Palaeontology published in England, Germany and America, and used by Australasian students. It is thought, therefore, that the time has arrived when an attempt should be made to collect the main facts bearing upon this subject, in order to present them from an Australasian standpoint. With this in view, references to fossils occurring in the northern hemisphere are subordinated, seeing that these may be easily obtained on reference to the accepted text-books in general use.
The present work does not presume to furnish a complete record of Australasian palaeontology, since that would mean the production of a much more extensive and costly volume. Sufficient information is here given, however, to form a groundwork for the student of this section of natural science, and a guide to the collector of these “medals of creation.”
The systematic portion of this book has been arranged primarily from the biological side, since Palaeontology is the “study of ancient life.” Taking each life-group, therefore, from the lowest to the highest types, all the divisions represented by fossils are dealt with in turn, beginning with their occurrence in the oldest rocks and ending with those in the newest strata.
If a commendation of the study of fossils, apart from its scientific utility, were needed, it could be pointed out that palaeontology as a branch of geology is, par excellence, an open-air study: and since it requires as handmaids all the sister sciences, is a subject of far-reaching interest. Microscopy and photography are of immense value in certain branches of fossil research, the former in the examination of the minute forms of mollusca, foraminifera and ostracoda, the latter in the exact portraiture of specimens too intricate to copy with the brush, or too evanescent to long retain, when out of their matrix, their clean fresh surfaces. With geology or palaeontology as an objective, a country walk may be a source of much enjoyment to its students, for “in their hand is Nature like an open book”; and the specimens collected on a summer excursion may be closely and profitably studied in the spare time of the winter recess.
The author sincerely trusts that students may share the same pleasure which he has derived from the study of these relics of past life; and that the present attempt to show their relationship both in geological time and biological organisation, may be the means of inducing many to make further advances in this fascinating subject.
In the production of this work several friends and collaborators have materially assisted, their aid considerably increasing its value. It is therefore with grateful thanks that the author acknowledges the help and encouragement given by Professor E. W. Skeats, D.Sc., who has not only been good enough to write the Introductory passages, but who has carefully gone over the MS. and made many helpful suggestions. Mr. W. S. Dun, F.G.S., Palaeontologist to the Geological Survey Branch of the Department of Mines, Sydney, has also rendered generous help in giving the benefit of his full acquaintance of the palaeontology of his own State. To the Trustees of the National Museum the author is under special obligations for permission to photograph many unique fossil specimens in the Museum collection, comprising Figs. 3, 16-18, 20-22, 28-31, 35, 39, 40, 45, 46, 51-54, 57, 62, 78, 79, 127, 133, 136, 147 and 148. The author’s thanks are also due to Dr. E. C. Stirling, M.D., M.A., F.R.S., for permission to use Figs. 143, 144 and 145, whilst similar privileges have been accorded by Prof. A. G. Seward, F.R.S., Dr. F. A. Bather, F.R.S., and Mr. C. L. Barrett. Prof. T. W. Edgeworth David, F.R.S., has kindly cleared up some doubtful points of stratigraphy and further increased the author’s indebtedness by the loan of a unique slide of Radiolaria figured on p. 69. Mr. Eastwood Moore, to whom special thanks are due, has greatly added to the pictorial side of this work by his skillful help in preparing many of the illustrations for the press, as well as in the drawing of the several maps. The grouped sets of fossils have been especially drawn for this work by the author. They are either copied from authentic specimens or from previously published drawings; references to the authorities being given in the accompanying legends. Dr. T. S. Hall has kindly read the section on Graptolites and Mammalia. For many helpful suggestions and the careful reading of proofs, thanks are especially owing to Mr. W. E. G. Simons, Mr. R. A. Keble, and to my wife.
Geological Department,
The University, Melbourne.