Coal, Bees and Fossils: The History and Significance of the Redbank Plains Formation Fossil Sites, South East Queensland

Q3 Agricultural and Biological Sciences Proceedings of the Royal Society of Queensland Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.53060/prsq.2022-11
A. Rix
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The Redbank Plains Formation, between Brisbane and Ipswich in South East Queensland, provides fossil evidence of the fauna and flora of the earliest part of the Cenozoic era, and is dated from the Paleogene Period, specifically the late Paleocene–early Eocene (66–55 Ma). These fossils have been collected and studied for over 120 years, but the conjunction of agriculture in the then-rural Redbank Plains district, and the mapping of the valuable Ipswich coalfields, led to their palaeontological significance being recognised and documented. Scientific study began in 1916 and has continued since, revealing some of the earliest evidence of modern Australian fauna and flora. However, the area’s rich underground coal resources and a hunger for residential land in a rapidly developing urban corridor, has resulted in the loss of or threats to the fossil sites. One deposit has been given local government status as a Conservation Park and remains accessible for scientific study, but the lack of either national or state protection for such significant sites in Queensland and Australia imperils our national geological heritage and its scientific contribution.
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煤、蜜蜂和化石:昆士兰东南部红岸平原地层化石遗址的历史和意义
位于昆士兰州东南部布里斯班和伊普斯维奇之间的红岸平原组提供了新生代早期动植物的化石证据,其年代为古近纪,特别是古新世晚期-始新世早期(66-55 Ma)。这些化石已经被收集和研究了120多年,但当时农村的红岸平原地区的农业结合,以及宝贵的伊普斯维奇煤田的测绘,使它们的古生物学意义得到了承认和记录。科学研究始于1916年,此后一直在继续,揭示了一些现代澳大利亚动植物的最早证据。然而,该地区丰富的地下煤炭资源和快速发展的城市走廊对住宅用地的渴望,导致了化石遗址的损失或威胁。一个矿床已被当地政府认定为自然保护公园,并仍可用于科学研究,但在昆士兰州和澳大利亚,缺乏对这些重要遗址的国家或州保护,危及了我们的国家地质遗产及其科学贡献。
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Proceedings of the Royal Society of Queensland
Proceedings of the Royal Society of Queensland Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Agricultural and Biological Sciences (all)
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