Waterloo Farm lagerstätte


The Waterloo Farm lagerstätte in South Africa is a unique fossil site which preserves a wide range of 360 million-year-old plant, invertebrate and vertebrate fossils from a high-latitudinal Gondwanan setting. Collectively they provide a holistic record of a Famennian estuarine ecosystem. The fossils are preserved as flattened silvery-white impressions in black shale.
Witpoort Formation black shales within the Eastern Cape often exhibit cyclical changes in composition, which likely reflect fluctuations in water salinity. Water stratification within the estuarine lake frequently led to anoxic bottom waters, resulting in episodes of exceptional preservation.
Witpoort Formation sediments were deeply buried due to continued basinal subsidence through the Carboniferous, and were subsequently metamorphosed during the massive Permian aged Cape Fold Belt orogenesis. Hundreds of millions of years of erosion and uplift brought the Waterloo Farm shales back up to near surface, they were exposed in 1985, in new road cuttings south of Makhanda/Grahamstown, during construction of a bypass road.
On-site excavations were conducted in the 1990s, but the instability of the road cutting led to it being cut back in 1999 and in 2008. On both occasions large quantities of shale were rescued which provides for ongoing excavation. Decades of research has revealed the most important Late Devonian fossil site from what was the southern portion of Gondwana -a region incorporating present-day sub-saharan Africa, South America and western Antarctica.
Because the original fine black mud was often very low in oxygen, plants and animals rapidly buried in it sometimes left behind impressions of their soft parts. This is extremely rare in the fossil record which normally only preserves bones, teeth and other hard bits. Exceptionally, what is recorded is the remains of an entire estuarine ecosystem, from delicate waterweeds and seaweeds to small clams, baby fish and the bones of larger fish. Land plants which grew nearby are also preserved, from the remains of small undergrowth species to fronds from the earliest types of trees.
More than 20 species new to science have been named from Waterloo Farm, which probably represent about a third of the total number of taxa indicated by remains preserved in the shale. Taxa include the tetrapods Tutusius umlambo and Umzantsia amazana, which are Africa's earliest known tetrapods and the only non-tropical Devonian tetrapods known. The first described fossils from Waterloo Farm comprise remains of sub-Saharan Africa's earliest woody trees. fronds from the Waterloo Farm lagerstätte in the Eastern Cape, South Africa. These represent the only high latitude species of Archaeopteris'' as yet described.. Other fossils from Waterloo Farm include the oldest known land-living animal from Gondwana, the oldest fossil lamprey in the world and Africa's oldest coelacanth from the world's earliest known coelacanth nursery.
Other species represented include several species of armour plated fish, spiny finned fish, sharks, ray-finned fish, a range of lobe-finned fish, bivalves; seaweeds; charophyte waterweeds, and a diverse range of plants.

List of published taxa from Waterloo Farm

Animalia

Invertebrates

Mollusca, Bivalvia
Naiadites form Devonica
Arthropoda
Eurypterida
Cyrtoctenid eurypterid indet.
Arachnida, Scorpiones
Gondwanascorpio emzantsiensis

Vertebrata

Agnatha
Priscomyzon riniensis
Placodermi
Bothriolepis africana
Groenlandaspis riniensis
Africanaspis doryssa
Africanaspis edmountaini
Gen. et sp. indet.
Acanthodii
Diplacanthus acus
Diplacanthus indet
acanthodidid indet
gyracanthid indet
Chondrichthyes
Plesioselachus macracantha
Antarctilamna ultima
Actinopterygii
gen. et. sp. indet.
Sarcopterygii
Serenichthys kowiensis
Hyneria sp.
Rhizodont indet.
Isityumzi mlomomde
Tetrapoda
Tutusius umlambo
Umzantsia amazana

Plantae

Algae

Rhodophyta or Phaeophyta
Hungerfordia fionae
Yeaia africana
Charophyta
Hexachara setacea
Hexachara riniensis
Octochara crassa
Octochara gracilis

Tracheophyta

Zosterophyllopsida
Zosterophyll indet.
Lycopsida
Leptophloeum rhombicum
Kowieria alveoformis
Iridopteridales
Iridopterlean indet
Sphenopsida
Rinistachya hilleri
Progymnospermopsida
Archaeopteris notosaria