Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-12T22:24:26.116Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Ceratodus diutinus, a new ceratodont from Cretaceous and Late Oligocene–Medial Miocene deposits in Australia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 May 2016

A. Kemp*
Affiliation:
Queensland Museum, P.O. Box 300, South Brisbane, Queensland 4101, Australia

Abstract

Ceratodus diutinus, a new species of ceratodont lungfish similar to but not identical with Ceratodus kaupi Agassiz, 1838–1844, is described from the Lower Cretaceous Griman Creek Formation at Grawan and Lightning Ridge in northern New South Wales, Australia, and the Toolebuc Formation at Canary Station near Boulia in western Queensland. The species also occurred in one Late Oligocene–Middle Miocene deposit at North Prospect, Lake Pinpa, South Australia (Namba Formation). This is the first record from Australia of a species of Ceratodus similar to the Triassic ceratodonts of Europe. The Australian species lasted much longer than the related European species, C. kaupi, which is restricted to Triassic deposits.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Paleontological Society 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Agassiz, L. 1838–1844. Recherches sur les Poissons fossiles. Volume III. Ch. V. Du genre Ceratodus , p. 129136. Imprimerie de Petitpierre, Neuchâtel.Google Scholar
Byrnes, J. 1977. Notes on the Rolling Downs Group in the Milparinka, White Cliffs and Angledool 1:250,000 sheet series/areas. Geological Survey of New South Wales Petroleum Report, 77:117.Google Scholar
Case, E. C. 1921. A new species of Ceratodus from the Upper Triassic of Western Texas. Occasional Papers of the Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan, 101:12.Google Scholar
Chabakov, A. V. 1931. Description des restes de Ceratodontidae, trouve dans le calcaires triasiques du Mont Bogdo. Travaux de l'Institut paléozoologique de l'Academie des Sciences de U.R.S.S., 1:4555.Google Scholar
Chapman, F. 1914. On a new species of Ceratodus from the Cretaceous of New South Wales. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria, 1914:2627.Google Scholar
Dziewa, T. J. 1980a. Early Triassic Osteichthyans from the Knocklofty Formation of Tasmania. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Tasmania, 114:145160.Google Scholar
Dziewa, T. J. 1980b. Note on a dipnoan fish from the Triassic of Antarctica. Journal of Palaeontology, 54:488490.Google Scholar
Gill, T. 1873. On the homologies of the shoulder girdle of the Dipnoans and other fishes. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 11:173178.Google Scholar
Hills, E. S. 1934. Tertiary fresh water fishes from Southern Queensland. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum, 10:157174.Google Scholar
Kemp, A. 1982. Neoceratodus djelleh, a new ceratodont lungfish from Duaringa, Queensland. Alcheringa, 6:151155.Google Scholar
Kemp, A. 1983. Ceratodus nargun, a new early Cretaceous lungfish from Cape Lewis, Victoria. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria, 95:2324.Google Scholar
Kemp, A. 1990. Problems associated with tooth plates and taxonomy in Australian ceratodont lungfish. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum, 28:99.Google Scholar
Kemp, A. 1991. Australian Mesozoic and Cainozoic lungfish, p. 465498. In Vickers-Rich, P., Monaghan, J. M., Baird, R. F., and Rich, T. H. (eds.), Vertebrate Palaeontology of Australasia. Pioneer Design Studio, Lilydale, Victoria, in co-operation with the Monash University Publications Committee, Melbourne.Google Scholar
Kemp, A., and Molnar, R. E. 1981. Neoceratodus forsteri from the Lower Cretaceous of New South Wales, Australia. Journal of Paleontology, 55:211217.Google Scholar
Kirkland, J. I. 1987. Upper Jurassic and Cretaceous lungfish tooth plates from the Western Interior, the last Dipnoan faunas of North America. Hunteria, 2:116.Google Scholar
Knight, W. C. 1898. Some new Jurassic vertebrates from Wyoming: first paper. American Journal of Science (4), 5:186.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liu, H., and Yeh, H. 1957. Two new species of Ceratodus from Szechuan, China. Vertebrata Palasiatica, 1:305309.Google Scholar
Liu, H., and Yeh, H. 1960. Two new Ceratodus from Shenmu, N. Shensi. Vertebrata Palasiatica, 4:1416.Google Scholar
Martin, M. 1984a. Revision des Arganodontidés et des Neoceratodontidés (Dipnoi, Ceratodontiformes) du Crétacé Africain. Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie, Abhandlungen, 169:225260.Google Scholar
Martin, M. 1984b. Deux Lepidosirenidae (Dipnoi) crétacés du Sahara, Protopterus humei (Priem) et Protopterus protopteroides (Tabaste). Paleontologicheskii zhurnal, 58:265277.Google Scholar
Miall, L. C. 1878a. Monograph of the Sirenoid and Crossopterygian Ganoids. Palaeontological Society, London, 32 p.Google Scholar
Miall, L. C. 1878b. On the genus Ceratodus with special reference to the fossil teeth found at Maledi, central India. Memoirs of the Geological Survey of India, Palaeontologia, Indica, 1:917.Google Scholar
Molnar, R. E. 1980. Australian late Mesozoic terrestrial tetrapods: survey and implications. Memoire de la Societé Geologique de France, 59:131143.Google Scholar
Muller, J. 1845. Mémoire sur les Ganoides et sur la classification naturelle des Poissons. Annales des Sciences Naturelle, 4:553.Google Scholar
Pascual, R., and Bondesio, P. 1976. Notas sobre Vertebrados de la Frontera Cretácica–Terciaria. III Ceratodontidae (Peces Osteichthyes, Dipnoi) de la formación Coli-Toro y de otras unidades del Cretácico Tardio de Patagonia y sur de Mendoza. Sus implicancias paleobiogeográficas. Actas del Sexto Congreso de Geologia de Argentina, 1:565577.Google Scholar
Reed, J. W. 1985. Devonian dipnoans from Red Hill, Nevada. Journal of Paleontology, 59:11811193.Google Scholar
Rich, T. H., Archer, M., Hand, S. J., Godthelp, H., Muirhead, J., Pledge, N. S., Flannery, T. F., Woodburne, M. O., Case, J. A., Tedford, R. H., Turnbull, W. D., Lundelius, E. L., Rich, L. S. V., Whitelaw, M. J., Kemp, A., and Rich, P. V. 1991. Australian Mesozoic and Tertiary terrestrial mammal localities. Appendix I, p. 10051057. In Vickers-Rich, P., Monaghan, J. M., Baird, R. F., and Rich, T. H. (eds.), Vertebrate Palaeontology of Australasia. Published by Pioneer Design Studio: Lilydale, Victoria, in co-operation with the Monash University Publications Committee, Melbourne.Google Scholar
Schultze, H. P. 1981a. A dipnoan tooth plate from the Lower Cretaceous of Kansas, U.S.A. Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Sciences, 84:187195.Google Scholar
Schultze, H. P. 1981b. Das Schädeldach eines ceratodontiden Lungenfische aus der Trias Süddeutschlands (Dipnoi, Pisces). Stuttgarter Beiträge zur Naturkunde, Serie B (Geologie und Paläontologie), 31(70):131.Google Scholar
Tabaste, N. 1963. Etude des restes de Poissons du Crétacé Saharien. Mémoires de l'Institut francais d'Afrique noire, Séries A, sciences naturelles, 68:437485.Google Scholar
Vorobyeva, E. I. 1967. A Triassic ceratod from South Fergana and remarks on the systematics and phylogeny of ceratodontids. Paleontologicheskii zhurnal, 1967:102111. [Translated in Paleontology Journal, 1967:80–87.]Google Scholar
Vorobyeva, E. I., and Minikh, M. G. 1968. Experimental application of biometry to the study of ceratodontid dental plates. Paleontologicheskii zhurnal, 1968:7687. [Translated in Paleontology Journal, 1968:217–227.]Google Scholar
Wade, M. 1990. A Review of the Australian Cretaceous longipinnate ichthyosaur Platypterygius (Ichthyosauria, Ichthyopterygia). Memoirs of the Queensland Museum, 28:114137.Google Scholar
Wade, R. T. 1935. The Triassic fishes of Brookvale, New South Wales. British Museum (Natural History), London, 89 p.Google Scholar
White, E. I. 1925. Two new fossil species of Epiceratodus from South Australia. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 16:139146.Google Scholar
White, E. I. 1926. On the occurrence of the genus Epiceratodus in the Upper Cretaceous of New South Wales. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 17:677682.Google Scholar
Woodward, A. S. 1891. Catalogue of Fossil Fishes in the British Museum (Natural History) volume II. British Museum (Natural History), London, 553 p.Google Scholar
Woodward, A. S. 1906. On a tooth of Ceratodus and a dinosaurian claw from the Lower Jurassic of Victoria, Australia. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 18:13.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Young, C. C. 1941. On two new fossil fishes from southwestern China. Bulletin of the Geological Society of China, 21:9196.CrossRefGoogle Scholar