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Toolebuc Formation

The Toolebuc Formation is a geological formation that extends from Queensland across South Australia and the Northern Territory in Australia, whose strata date back to the Albian stage of the Early Cretaceous. Dinosaurs, pterosaurs, plesiosaurs, ichthyosaurs, protostegid turtles, sharks, chimaeroids and bony fish remains are among the fossils that have been recovered from the formation. Deposition occurred in a cool to temperate inland sea setting and the present lithology is dominantly made up of limey shales with abundant Inoceramus bivalve shells. Ichthyosaurs and protostegid turtles were the most common marine reptiles at this time in the Eromanga Sea, in contrast to older Aptian deposits such as the Bulldog Shale of South Australia, which show that plesiosaurs were previously more abundant and also more diverse. The Toolebuc Formation is one of the richest known sources of Mesozoic vertebrate fossils in Australia, with notable collecting areas situated around the towns of Richmond, Julia Creek, Hughenden and Boulia.MinmiIndeterminateGeographically present in Queensland, Australia.MuttaburrasaurusIndeterminateGeographically present in Queensland, Australia.NanantiusN. eosGeographically present in Queensland, Australia.'Tibiotarsi and vertebra.'AussiedracoA. molnariGeographically present in Queensland, Australia.MythungaM. camaraGeographically present in Queensland, Australia.KronosaurusK. queenslandicusGeographically present in Australia.EromangasaurusE. australisGeographically present in Australia.Polycotylidae indet.Undescribed polycotylid (specimen QM F18041, nicknamed Penny)Geographically present in Queensland, Australia.PlatypterygiusP. australisGeographically present in Australia.BouliachelysB. suteriGeographically present in Queensland, Australia.CratocheloneC. berneyiGeographically present in Queensland, Australia.NotocheloneN. costataGeographically present in Queensland, Australia. The Toolebuc Formation is a geological formation that extends from Queensland across South Australia and the Northern Territory in Australia, whose strata date back to the Albian stage of the Early Cretaceous. Dinosaurs, pterosaurs, plesiosaurs, ichthyosaurs, protostegid turtles, sharks, chimaeroids and bony fish remains are among the fossils that have been recovered from the formation. Deposition occurred in a cool to temperate inland sea setting and the present lithology is dominantly made up of limey shales with abundant Inoceramus bivalve shells. Ichthyosaurs and protostegid turtles were the most common marine reptiles at this time in the Eromanga Sea, in contrast to older Aptian deposits such as the Bulldog Shale of South Australia, which show that plesiosaurs were previously more abundant and also more diverse. The Toolebuc Formation is one of the richest known sources of Mesozoic vertebrate fossils in Australia, with notable collecting areas situated around the towns of Richmond, Julia Creek, Hughenden and Boulia. Possible indeterminate ankylosaurid remains are present in Queensland, Australia. Indeterminate ornithopod remains have also been found in Queensland, Australia.

[ "Cretaceous", "Structural basin", "Oil shale" ]
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