The Fur Formation is a marine geological formation of Ypresian (Lower Eocene Epoch, c. 56.0-54.5 Ma) age which crops out in the Limfjord region of northern Denmark from Silstrup via Mors and Fur to Ertebølle, and can be seen in many cliffs and quarries in the area. The Diatomite Cliffs ( moler in Danish) is on the Danish list of tentative candidates for World Heritage and may become a World Heritage site. Fossils found in the Fur Formation are primarily housed at the Fossil and Mo-clay Museum on Mors Island, the Fur Museum on Fur Island, and the Natural History Museum of Denmark (formerly named Geological Museum) in Copenhagen.
It is known for its abundant fossil fish, insects, reptiles, birds and plants. The Fur Formation was deposited just above the Palaeocene-Eocene boundary, about 55 million years ago, and its tropical or sub-tropical flora indicate that the climate after the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum was moderately warm (approximately 4-8 degrees warmer than today).
Glacial activity has moved and folded all exposed moler in a complicated pattern which permits very precise mapping of glacial movement at the end of the last ice age, and has, due to the ash layers, created an extraordinary pedagogy case for studying tectonics.
Chascacocolius | C. oscitans? | Sandcoleidae | Only known from one wing | |
Eocypselus | E. vincenti | Apodiformes | Mainly known from the London Clay | |
Galliformes indet. | Unapplicable | Galloanserae | Known from foot imprints distinct from all other Eocene galliforms | |
Lithornis | L. vulturinus | Lithornithidae | First complete lithornithid specimen known | |
Mopsitta | M. tanta | Psittaciformes incertae sedis? | Formerly the largest fossil parrot known, however it may actually be synonymous with the ibis Rhynchaeites | |
Morsoravis | M. sedilis | Morsoravidae | Formerly classed as a charadriiform before being reclassified as a basal member of Psittacopasseres | |
Halcyornithidae indet. | Unapplicable | Eufalconimorphae | Only known from one humerus | |
Pellornis | P. mikkelseni | Messelornithidae | Limb specialisation indicates it was likely cursorial, redescribed from several complete skeletons which support it being a crown-gruiform | |
Scandiavis | S. mikkelseni | Charadriiformes? | Likely a basal member due to features of the postcrania | |
Septencoracias | S. morsensis | Coraciiformes | One of the earliest rollers, preserved with fish in its stomach | |
Septentrogon | S. madseni | Trogonidae | Earliest trogon known | |
? Analectis | ? A. sp. | Fur | A Turkmenidae Lampriformes. | ||
? Antigonia | ? A. sp. | Fur | A Caproidae. | ||
Archaeozeus | A. skamolensis | Fur | An Archaeozeidae Zeiformes. | ||
? Arius | ? A. sp. | Fur | A Ariidae. | ||
Atheriniformes indet. | Fur | An atheriniform. | |||
Aulostomoidea indet. | Fur | An Aulostomoidea. | |||
Brychaetoides | B. greenwoodi | Fur | A bonytongue. | ||
cf. Brychaetus | B. sp. | Stolle Klint | A bonytongue. | ||
Butyrumichthys | B. henricii | Fur | A medusafish. | ||
Euzaphlegidae indet. | Fur | A euzaphlegid. | |||
Exellia | E. sp. | Fur | An Exelliidae Percomorpha. | ||
Furichthys | F. fieldsoei | Fur | A bonytongue. | ||
Heterosteoglossum | H. foreyi | Fur, Stolle Klint | A bonytongue. | ||
Holosteus | H. sp. | Fur | A barracudina. | ||
Tarpon indet. | Fur | A tarpon. | |||
Mene | M. sp. | Fur | A Mene. | ||
Moclaybalistes | M. danekrus | Fur | A Moclaybalistidae tetraodontiform. | ||
Moray eel indet. | Fur | A moray eel. | |||
Osteoglossiformes indet. | Fur | A small-sized osteoglossiform. | |||
Palaeocentrotus | P. boeggildi | Fur | A palaeocentrotid lampriform. | ||
Palaeorhynchidae indet. | Fur | A billfish. | |||
?Percopsiformes indet. | Fur | A potential percopsiform. | |||
Polyspinatus | P. fluere | Fur | A beardfish. | ||
Protozeus | P. kuehnei | Fur | A Protozeidae zeiform. | ||
Ramphosus | R. sp. | Fur | A Syngnathiformes. | ||
Rhinocephalus | R. sp. | Fur | A hake. | ||
? Rondeletia | ? R. sp. | Fur | A Cetomimiformes, possibly a redmouth whalefish. | ||
?Salmonidae indet. | Fur | A potential Salmonidae. | |||
? Sardinella | ? S. sp. | Fur | A Clupeidae. | ||
?Scorpaeniformes indet. | Fur | A potential scorpaeniform. | |||
Surlykus | S. longigracilis | Fur | An Argentiniformes, the most common fish in the Mo-Clay. | ||
? Vomeropsis | ? V. sp. | Fur | A Carangidae. | ||
Xosteoglossid | X. rebeccae | Stolle Klint | A bonytongue. |
Apachyus | A. madseni | Apachyidae | First fossil apachyid | |
Cephalallus | C. vitalii | Spondylidinae | First longhorn beetle from the formation | |
Cryptocheilus | C. leleji | Pepsini | Earliest pompillid wasp known | |
Danoberotha | D. verkleijorum | Berothidae | First berothid from the formation | |
Danochrysa | D. madseni | Chrysopidae | ||
Danomantispa | D. frandseni | Mantispidae | Intermediate between Drepanicinae and Mantispinae | |
Eodysagrion | E. mikkelseni | Dysagrionidae (Odonata) | Member of its own subfamily, Eodysagrioninae | |
Eosassula | E. szwedoi | Nogodinidae | One of the few nogodinid fossils | |
Furagrion | F. jutlandicus | Zygoptera | Bears all wing venation characters of cephalozygopterans, but has a head similar to zygopterans | |
Furochrysa | F. alisae | Chrysopidae | Distinguished by a long crossvein | |
Mesypochrysa | M. nielseni | Chrysopidae | Latest record of the Mesozoic genus Mesypochrysa | |
Pachycondyla | P. rebekkae | Ponerinae | One of the earliest fossil ants in an extant genus at the time of description | |
Palaeopsychops | P. quadratus | Polystoechotidae | Bears stripes along its crossveins | ]] |
Parabaissaeshna | P. ejerslevense | Aeshnidae | Resembles the Mesozoic Baissaeshna | |
Pseudotettigonia | P. amoena | Tettigoniidae | Preserves a complete stridulatory organ, with the structure of the organ suggesting that it was able to hear low ultrasound | |
Primorilestes | P. madseni | Dysagrionidae (Odonata) | ||
Protheristria | P. roldae | Mantispidae | In the same subfamily as the other mantisfly known from the formation, but otherwise unrelated | |
Rhantus | R. villumi | Dytiscidae | Oldest species in the genus | |
Stephenbrooksia | S. multifurcata | Chrysopidae | Bears unusual hind wing venation | |
Stolleagrion | S. foghnielseni | Cephalozygoptera (Odonata) | First odonate known from the early Ypresian | |
Triachrysa | T. rusti | Chrysopidae | Has three series of crossveins in its wings, alongside several unrelated genera | |
The total eruption volume of this series have been calculated as 21,000 km3, which occurred in 600,000 years. The most powerful single eruption of this series took place 54.0 million years ago (Ma) and ejected ca. 1,200 km3 of ash material, which makes it one of the largest basaltic pyroclastic eruptions in geological history. Egger, H. and Brückl, E., 2006: Gigantic volcanic eruptions and climatic change in the early Eocene - International Journal of Earth Sciences, Volume 95, Number 6, 1065-1070.
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