Talbragar fossil site


The Talbragar fossil site is a paleontological site of Jurassic age in the central west of New South Wales, Australia. It lies about north-east of the town of Gulgong, and north-west of Sydney. The site has been known for over a century during which it has been extensively excavated to the point of near exhaustion. It is now registered as a Crown Land Reserve for the preservation of fossils; access is by permit, and the collection of rocks and fossil specimens is prohibited. The reserve is listed on the Register of the National Estate.

Fossils

The fossil-bearing rocks are fine-grained siltstones and mudstones that are part of the Purlawaugh formation. They occur mainly as loose blocks and weathered shales over an area of about, with a thickness of no more than. They are thought to be the remnants of sediments from a small freshwater lake, surrounded by forest, which existed about 175 million years ago when Australia was part of Gondwana. The site is the only Jurassic fish site known in New South Wales.
The fossil material consists principally of the fishes that lived in the lake, as well as plants from the forest, whose remains accumulated in the sediments on the lake bed and were preserved. Among the many species discovered are sixteen kinds of plant, eight kinds of fish, several insects and a spider.