Sangkarewang Formation Explained

Period:Eocene
Type:Geological formation
Sangkarewang Formation
Region:West Sumatra
Country: Indonesia
Coordinates:-0.6°N 100.8°W
Paleocoordinates:-0.5°N 110.3°W
Unitof:Ombilin Basin
Overlies:Brani Formation
Underlies:Sawahlunto Formation
Prilithology:Shale, sandstone
Otherlithology:Oil shales

The Sankarewang Formation is an ?Eocene-aged geological formation in Sumatra, Indonesia near Padang. It is among the very few Paleogene fossil deposits from Southeast Asia that preserves a freshwater ecosystem, and contains many of the earliest records of freshwater fish taxa that now predominate the region. Many of the fishes from this formation are well-preserved as articulated skeletons. The fossils of the formation have been known since the 1870s, although they only received significant attention during the 1930s and again starting from the mid-2010s.

The age for this formation has long been disputed, with suggested ages ranging from the Cretaceous to the Miocene. Although the exact age still remains uncertain, most recent studies have settled on a tentative Paleogene age, with estimates ranging from the Paleocene[1] to the Oligocene. More recently, unpublished palynological data suggests that the overlying Sawahlunto Formation is of middle-late Eocene in age, which would most likely place the Sangkarewang Formation in the early-mid Eocene.

It was deposited within the Ombilin Basin, a small Paleogene-aged rift basin that formed from deformation along the Great Sumatran fault. The Sangkarewang Formation was deposited within a freshwater rift lake that formed in this basin early on, with anoxic bottom waters allowing for the fossilization of the fish skeletons.[2] The Sawahlunto Formation, long exploited for its coal seams, was later deposited in the lake on top of the Sangkarewang Formation. During the Oligocene, this gave way to a river delta (the Sawahtambang Formation), and was later flooded by the sea by the Miocene (the Ombilin Formation), before a tectonic uplift raised it above the sea. The formation has been explored for its oil shales.[3]

Paleobiota

Bony fish

Partially based on Woodward (1901) & Sanders (1934).[4] [5] Sanders (1934) published a comprehensive monograph about the fishes of the formation using a large number of specimens. However, the vast majority of these specimens are now lost, and may have potentially been destroyed during World War II, preventing any further study of her specimens.

GenusSpeciesMaterialNotesImages
aff. Amblypharyngodonaff A. sp.Pharyngeals.A potential carplet.[6]
BagariusB. gigasPectoral arch.A goonch catfish.
"Chirocentrus""C." polyodonJawsA fish of uncertain affinities, assigned to the wolf herrings.
EocyprinusE. sumatranusArticulated skeletons, all lost.A barb.
HadromosH. sandersaeArticulated skeleton.A barb.
HexasephusH. guentheriPharyngeals and dentition.A cypriniform.
MusperiaM. radiataFragmentary specimens, another complete specimen likely destroyedA bonytongue.[7]
NotopterusN. primaevusArticulated skeleton.A featherback.
OmbilinichthysO. yaminiArticulated skeleton.A gourami.[8]
?OsphronemusO. "goramy"Lost articulated skeletonsA gourami initially assigned to the modern giant gourami, and likely in the genus Osphronemus; however, the specimens have been lost, hindering further analysis.
Osteochilus'O.' fossilisLost articulated skeletonA potential labeonine.
PadangiaP. amblyostoma (=Thynnichthys amblyostoma)Articulated skeleton.A barb.[9]
PangasiusP. indicus (=Pseudeutropius verbeeki, Brachyspondylus saropteryx)Articulated skeleton.A shark catfish.
PauciuncusP. bussyi (=Puntius bussyi)Articulated skeletonsA potential smiliogastrine.
ProtosyngnathusP. sumatrensis (=Aulorhynchus sumatrensis)Articulated skeleton.A pipefish-like syngnathiform.[10]
Rasbora'R.' antiquaLost articulated skeletonsA danionin.
R.' mohri
SangkarewangiaS. sumatranusArticulated skeleton.A barb.
ScleropagesS. sp.Fragmentary remains.An arowana.
SundabarbusS. megacephalus (=Barbus megacephalus)Articulated skeleton.A barb.
ToxotesT. beaufortiArticulated skeleton.An archerfish, closely resembling modern species.[11]

Birds

Notes and References

  1. Web site: PBDB Collection . 2024-09-25 . paleobiodb.org.
  2. Whateley . M. K. G. . Jordan . G. R. . 1989 . Fan-delta-lacustrine sedimentation and coal development in the Tertiary Ombilin Basin, W Sumatra, Indonesia . Geological Society, London, Special Publications . en . 41 . 1 . 317–332 . 10.1144/GSL.SP.1989.041.01.22 . 1989GSLSP..41..317W . 0305-8719.
  3. Fatimah . Ward . Colin R. . 2009-01-31 . Mineralogy and organic petrology of oil shales in the Sangkarewang Formation, Ombilin Basin, West Sumatra, Indonesia . International Journal of Coal Geology . CSCOP-TSOP-ICCP 2007 Selected papers from the 2007 joint meeting of CSCOP-TSOP-ICCP: Unconventional petroleum systems & advances in organic petrology and geochemistry . 77 . 3 . 424–435 . 10.1016/j.coal.2008.04.005 . 2009IJCG...77..424F . 0166-5162.
  4. Book: Geology . British Museum (Natural History) Department of . Catalogue of the Fossil Fishes in the British Museum (Natural History): Actinopterygian Teleostomi of the suborders Isospondyli (in part), Ostariophysi, Apodes, Percesoces, Hemibranchii, Acanthopterygii, and Anacanthini . Woodward . Arthur Smith . 1901 . order of the Trustees . en.
  5. Book: Sanders, Margaretha . Die fossilen Fische der alttertiären Süsswasserablagerungen aus Mittel-Sumatra . 1934 . Mouton . de.
  6. Murray . Alison M. . 2020-01-02 . Early Cenozoic Cyprinoids (Ostariophysi: Cypriniformes: Cyprinidae and Danionidae) from Sumatra, Indonesia . Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology . en . 40 . 1 . e1762627 . 10.1080/02724634.2020.1762627 . 2020JVPal..40E2627M . 0272-4634.
  7. Taverne . Louis . 2009 . New insights on the osteology and taxonomy of the osteoglossid fishes phareodus, brychaetus and musperia teleostei, osteoglossomorpha. . Bulletin de l'Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique - Bulletin van het Koninklijk Belgisch Instituut voor Natuurwetenschappen . 79 . 176–190.
  8. Murray . A M. . Zaim . Y. . Rizal . Y. . Aswan . Y. . Gunnell . G F. . Ciochon . R L. . 2015-03-04 . A fossil gourami (Teleostei, Anabantoidei) from probable Eocene deposits of the Ombilin Basin, Sumatra, Indonesia . Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology . en . 35 . 2 . e906444 . 10.1080/02724634.2014.906444 . 2015JVPal..35E6444M . 0272-4634.
  9. Murray . Alison M. . 2019-09-02 . Redescription of Barbus megacephalus Günther, 1876 and Thynnichthys amblyostoma von der Marck, 1876 (Cypriniformes: Cyprinidae) from probable Eocene deposits of Southeast Asia, and an assessment of their taxonomic positions . Journal of Systematic Palaeontology . en . 17 . 17 . 1433–1455 . 10.1080/14772019.2018.1533897 . 2019JSPal..17.1433M . 1477-2019.
  10. Murray . Alison M. . 2022-12-31 . Re-description and phylogenetic relationships of † Protosyngnathus sumatrensis (Teleostei: Syngnathoidei), a freshwater pipefish from the Eocene of Sumatra, Indonesia . Journal of Systematic Palaeontology . en . 20 . 1 . 1–16 . 10.1080/14772019.2022.2113832 . 1477-2019.
  11. Web site: A REVIEW OF THE ARCHERFISHES (FAMILY TOXOTIDAE) Western Australian Museum . 2024-09-25 . museum.wa.gov.au . en.
  12. VAN TETS . G.F . RICH . P. V. . RINI MARINO-HADIWARDOYO . H. . 1989 . A reapraisal of Protoplotus beauforti from the Early Ttertiary of Sumatra and the basis of a new Pelecaniform familynimy . A Reapraisal of Protoplotus Beauforti from the Early Ttertiary of Sumatra and the Basis of a New Pelecaniform Familynimy . 5 . 57–75.