Cretaceous Era Fossil Fish - Sannine Formation
Cretaceous Era Fossil Fish - Sannine Formation
93 million years ago, prehistoric sea creatures swam in the coastal waters of what is now the Sannine Formation. This limestone deposit in northern Lebanon is a treasure trove of fossil specimens that paleontologists are learning more about each day.
These specimens are fossil fish from the Sannine Formation which have been preserved in incredible detail. Both small and large sizes are available, with more details below.
๐ธ A Large Fossil Armigatus from the Sannine Formation
Cretaceous Era Fossil Fish
During the Cretaceous, planet Earth appeared vastly different from the world we know today. 90 million years ago, in the area that is now northern Lebanon, a coastal sea was home to a robust ecosystem of prehistoric animals. Fish, turtles, lizards, cephalopods, and even pterodactyls.
The Sannine Formation is an incredible snapshot of this period of geologic history. The limestone deposit holds an astounding variety of fossils in great detail, many of which include soft body preservation. This makes it a rare resource for paleontologists to better understand prehistoric life.
๐ธ A Small Sannine Fish Fossil in hand
These specimens are fossil fish from the Sannine Formation. The fish come in two sizes, small and large. Our small fossils measure 2-3" and include a variety of smaller fishes, while the large fossils measure between 4-5" and come a variety of larger genera, most commonly the Armigatus genus.
The fantastic detail on these fossils can show skeletal impressions, fins, and even scale patterns in some cases. Each fossil is a completely unique piece of the Cretaceous Period. They are great collector's items and awesome to hold in your hand.
Both sizes ship in a padded carton along with an acrylic display stand. An informational photo card that serves as certificate of authenticity is also included. More fossils from the Sannine Formation, like shrimp, brittle stars, and showcase items are available in the collection below!
Temporal Range: Late AlbianโCenomanian (100,000,000โ93,500,000 Years Ago)
MORE ABOUT The SANNINE FORMATION
๐ธ A face to face look with an Armigatus fossil fish
From Prehistory to Our History
The Sannine Formation is an expansive deposit of limestone in Lebanon that holds within it a bounty of fish from the Cenomanian Age, around 100 million years ago. These specimens have been known since ancient times and were first documented by Herodotus around 2,500 years ago.
Around 1250, during the Seventh Crusade, King Louis IX of France received a gift of a fossil fish, described as being โall stone, but nothing was missing its form, nor eyes nor bones or color or anything else that was not as true.โ King Louis IXโs fossil fish was hardly uniqueโspecimens from the Sannine Formation are prized for their level of preservation and abundance.
๐ธ A school of fossil fish at Mini Museum
What's Swimming In the Sannine Formation?
These specimens are fossil fish from the Sannine Formation, with many of our larger samples from the Armigatus genus. These small fish were widely distributed across the Tethys Ocean, with their earliest appearance in the fossil record dating to the regionโs Cenomanian deposits. The fish can be identified by their oval or even heart-shaped scutes, natural body armor that protected them from predation.
These were not the only creatures in the Cretaceous seas here. Of the depositโs many groups of aquatic animals, the pycnodonts are of particular note, an order of highly diversified bony fish that lived for 175 million years from the end of the Triassic to the Eocene Epoch.
They had a wide distribution across saltwater, freshwater, and brackish environments, using their flat, molariform teeth to grind through gastropods and crustaceans. Pycnodonts peaked during the Cenomanian Age and are abundant in Lebanonโs Sannine Formation.
๐ธ A Geologic Map of Northern Lebanon. The Sannine Formation is just outside Hjoula.
A Fossilized Ecosystem
The Sannine Formation is considered a lagerstรคtte, a deposit with an exceptional degree of preservation of the marine life of the Tethys Ocean between Laurasia and Gondwana. A 2010 study uncovered a pterosaur Microtuban altivolans dating to the Cenomanian, the most complete pterosaur find from the African tectonic plate.
Even after hundreds of years of exploration, the Sannine Formation and the rest of Lebanonโs fossil deposits are still yielding up new finds for paleontologists.
Front of the Specimen Card
Back of the Specimen Card
Further Reading
Capasso, Luigi. โThe History and the Situation of the World Famous Fossil Fish Quarries in Lebanon.โ Universitร degli Studi G. d'Annunzio Chieti e Pescara. (2019)
Forey, Peter L. et al. โFossil Fishes from the Cenomanian (Upper Cretaceous) of Namoura, Lebanon.โ Journal of systematic palaeontology 1.4 (2003): 227โ330. Web.
Kriwet, Jรผrgen. โA New Pycnodont Fish Genus (Neopterygii: Pycnodontiformes) from the Cenomanian (Upper Cretaceous) of Mount Lebanon.โ Journal of vertebrate paleontology 24.3 (2004): 525โ532. Web.
Petit, Gilles, and Sylvain Charbonnier. โFossil Sponge Gemmules, Epibionts of Carpopenaeus Garassinoi n. Sp. (Crustacea, Decapoda) from the Sahel Alma Lagerstรคtte (Late Cretaceous, Lebanon).โ Geodiversitas. 34.2 (2012): 359โ372. Web. (not of genus?)
Stรถhr, Sabine, Timothy D OโHara, and Ben Thuy. โGlobal Diversity of Brittle Stars (Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea).โ PloS one 7.3 (2012): e31940โe31940. Web.
Taverne, Louis, and Luigi Capasso. โOn the โCoccodusโ Lindstroemi Species Complex (Pycnodontiformes, Gladiopycnodontidae) from the Marine Late Cretaceous of Lebanon, with the Description of Two New Genera.โ European Journal of Taxonomy, no. 101, 2014, https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2014.101.
Vullo, Romain et al. โA Unique Cretaceous-Paleogene Lineage of Piranha-Jawed Pycnodont Fishes.โ Scientific reports 7.1 (2017): 6802โ9. Web.