Mvh. Wilson, TAPHONOMY OF A MASS-DEATH LAYER OF FISHES IN THE PALEOCENE PASKAPOO FORMATION AT JOFFRE BRIDGE, ALBERTA, CANADA, Canadian journal of earth sciences, 33(11), 1996, pp. 1487-1498
A layer of silty mudstone only a few centimetres thick, in the lower p
art of the mainly fluvial Paskapoo Formation, contains thousands of co
mplete skeletons of fossil fish and is Tiffanian (Late Paleocene, Ti3)
in age. The diversity represented in the layer is low, with thousands
of specimens of a species in the trout-perch family (Percopsidae), te
ns of specimens of a species in the smelt family (Osmeridae), and just
two specimens of a species of osteoglossomorph in the family Osteoglo
ssidae recovered to date. Although the fishes occur without other kind
s of fossils in the ''Fish Layer,'' other layers in the same outcrop h
ave yielded abundant remains of plants, insects, mollusks, and mammals
. Taphonomic features of the Fish Layer are used to test the hypothesi
s that it represents a mass-death event and to evaluate mechanisms of
formation. There is little disarticulation and no sign of scavenging,
fish occur in distinct size classes, individuals of the smelt species
demonstrate breeding tubercles, fish tend to be clumped together on a
scale of a few metres or less, and fish tend to lie with their heads f
acing one or perhaps two preferred directions. These findings suggest
that the deposit represents a mass-death event, probably occurring dur
ing spring or early summer high water while the fish were attempting t
o spawn in shallow water, and that the layer itself was deposited unde
r the influence of gentle currents and wave action. Such conditions co
uld have occurred during or following a flood that trapped the fish in
an overbank, backswamp, or abandoned-channel pond or shallow lake, as
has recently been suggested on sedimentological and stratigraphic evi
dence. Rapid burial is probably the reason for the lack of scavenging
and disarticulation. This deposit shows that well-preserved fish skele
tons can be found in large numbers in fluvial formations, representing
paleoenvironments and time intervals for which our knowledge of fish
diversity has been poor in the past.