Poivre Fm, Latitude Point (Miocene of Australia)

Also known as Loc. 11 (McNamara and Kendrick 1994)

Where: Western Australia, Australia (20.8° S, 115.5° E: paleocoordinates 29.4° S, 111.0° E)

• coordinate stated in text

• outcrop-level geographic resolution

When: Poivre Formation, Middle Miocene (16.0 - 11.6 Ma)

• STRATIGRAPHIC RELATIONS: Miocene rocks of the Poivre Fm overly Eocene rocks with a transgressive unconformity. THICKNESS: As thick as 29 m. AGE: Originally determined to be Early Miocene by Glaessner (in McWhae and Parry, 1954), since refined to be Middle Miocene in age (Caproniere 1975; McNamara and Kendrick 1994). STRATIGRAPHIC POSITION:Small lens of white to pink limestone, overlying yellow, rubbly limestone.

• group of beds-level stratigraphic resolution

Environment/lithology: shallow subtidal; lithified, shelly/skeletal, red, white, sandy, calcareous limestone

• ENVIRONMENT: Very shallow water, calcareous, soft sandy substrates.
• SPECIFIC LITHOLOGY: White-pink sandy limestone. GENERAL LITHOLOGY: No specific lithology for this collection. The Poivre Fm shows pronounced vertical changes in lithology, ranging from brown, yellow to pink limestone, classified as calcarenites of fine or coarse grain-size. LITHIFICATION: Lithified, stated in text to be "hard limestone"

Size class: macrofossils

Preservation: cast, mold/impression, original calcite, replaced with calcite

Collection methods: quarrying,

• COLLECTORS: Collected by authors, K.J. McNamara and G.W. Kendrick. REPOSITORY: Western Australian Museum (WAM)

Primary reference: K.J. McNamara and G.W. Kendrick. 1994. Cenozoic Molluscs and Echinoids of Barrow Island, Western Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum Supplement 51 [A. Miller/A. Hendy]more details

Purpose of describing collection: taxonomic analysis

PaleoDB collection 63308: authorized by Austin Hendy, entered by Austin Hendy on 11.08.2006

Creative Commons license: CC BY (attribution)

Taxonomic list

• COMPLETENESS: Exhaustive for gastropoda, bivalvia and echinoidea, although the fauna is probably depleted through poor preservation and requires further collecting. Foraminifera mentioned to be present, but not listed. NOMENCLATURE: Authoritative publication, though poor preservation precludes description of many new forms, and assignment of species names.
Echinoidea
 Clypeasteroida - Clypeasteridae
Clypeaster butleri n. sp. McNamara and Kendrick 1994 sand dollar
Gastropoda
 Trochoidea - Turbinidae
Turbo (Marmarostoma) sp. Swainson 1829 snail
 Cerithioidea - Cerithiidae
Cerithiidae indet. Fleming 1822 cerith snail
Cerithium ? sp. Bruguière 1789 cerith snail
Rhinoclavis (Proclava) sp. Thiele 1929 cerith snail
 Sorbeoconcha - Campanilidae
Campanile sp. Fischer 1884 snail
 Sorbeoconcha - Vitrinellidae
Vitrinellidae indet. Bush 1897 snail
 Neogastropoda - Columbellidae
Pyrene sp. Röding 1798 snail
 Neogastropoda - Conidae
Conus "sp. B" Linnaeus 1758 cone shell
Conus "sp. C" Linnaeus 1758 cone shell
 Neogastropoda - Volutidae
sensu lato Lyria sp. Gray 1847 volute
 Sorbeoconcha - Strombidae
Strombus (Trichornis) "sp. A" Linnaeus 1758 conch
Rimella sp. Agassiz 1840 true conch
Bivalvia
 Arcida - Glycymerididae
"Glycymeris (Tucetona) sp." = Tucetona
"Glycymeris (Tucetona) sp." = Tucetona Iredale 1939 clam
 Cardiida - Cardiidae
Acrosterigma sp. Dall 1900 cockle
 Cardiida - Veneridae
"Ventricolaria ? sp." = Globivenus Coen 1934 venus clam
Dosinia (? Austrodosinia) sp. Dall 1902 venus clam
Pitar ? sp. Römer 1857 venus clam
 Lucinida - Lucinidae
Codakia ? sp. Scopoli 1777 clam
 Carditida - Carditidae
Carditidae indet. Fleming 1820 clam