Quarrying operations for fossil fish from the Bear Gulch Limestone (Heath F
ormation, Namurian, Montana, USA) have occurred from 1968 to 1997 and conti
nue. The Bear Gulch Limestone lens (14 x 9 km) thins to a shore line on all
edges except the buried eastern boundary, and contains an entirely marine
flora and fauna. Eighty outcrops have been sampled, and 4 547 identifiable
fish of 113 taxa have been recorded. This study details aspects of the dive
rsity and distribution of the fishes of the Bear Gulch Bay analyzed on the
basis of geographic areas, following facies and sedimentary criteria. The t
otal diversity of the fish fauna is 21.08 (Simpson index) and 12.07 (Margal
ef index). Diversity decreases from east to west and towards the southern m
argin. These trends mask dramatic differences in species occurrences and do
minant species in each area. The high diversity of the "Depocenter" area ca
n be accounted for by its proximity to the mouth of the bay and access to t
he epicontinental seaway to the east. The southeast region is comprised of
the Blacktail, Alien, and Buchek areas. Diversity declines greatly from the
algae - and sponge - rich Blacktail area southwestward to the marginal Buc
hek area. This region contains several dominant species that are adapted to
lurk in or maneuver among plants, feed from the bottom, or burrow High num
bers of larval paleoniscoids and the coelacanth Caridosuctor lower the dive
rsity of the near-shore North Shore area. The western end of the bay is dom
inated by Acanthodes, scales of Listracanthus and Strepsodus, and large cla
dodont sharks. Fish distributions, preliminary assessments of morphological
adaptations, and facies all support the concept of a heterogeneous set of
habitats within this fossil bay.