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Australia's earliest tetrapod swimming traces from the Hawkesbury Sandstone (Middle Triassic) of the Sydney Basin

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 May 2020

Roy M. Farman
Affiliation:
School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales, 2052, Australia School of Environmental and Rural Science, University of New England, Armidale, New South Wales, 2351, Australia
Phil R. Bell
Affiliation:
School of Environmental and Rural Science, University of New England, Armidale, New South Wales, 2351, Australia

Abstract

The Hawkesbury Sandstone (Hawkesbury Series, Sydney Basin) on the southeastern coast of New South Wales, Australia, preserves a depauperate but important vertebrate tetrapod body-fossil record from the Early and Middle Triassic. As with many fossil sites around the world, the ichnological record has helped to shed light on the paleoecology of this interval. Herein, we investigate historical reports of a trackway pertaining to a putative short-tailed reptile found at Berowra Creek in the 1940s. Reinvestigation of the surviving track-bearing slabs augmented by archival photographs of the complete trackway, suggests that these impressions, which consist primarily of didactyl tracks (plus less common monodactyl and tridactyl traces), represent the earliest example of a swimming tetrapod found in Australia. Another isolated specimen (possibly from a nearby locality at Annangrove) appears to represent similar didactyl swim traces of a second, larger individual. Although the identities of the trackmakers are unknown, the Berowra Creek individual had an estimated body length of between ~80 cm (short-coupled) and 1.35 m (long-coupled), and produced the subaqueous trackway while travelling upslope (against the current) on a sandbar within a braided river system of the Hawkesbury Sandstone. These trackways partially resemble amphibian swim traces in the so-called Batrachichnus C Lunichnium continuum, but appear to represent a unique locomotion trace. This reanalysis of the Berowra Creek trackway provides insight into the locomotion of tetrapods of the Triassic Hawkesbury Series, which remains a poorly understood aspect of their life history.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2020, The Paleontological Society

Introduction

Ichnites are an important source of biological information that can be used to fill the gaps often left from the incomplete body-fossil record (Thulborn, Reference Thulborn1990; Lockley and Meyer, Reference Lockley and Meyer2000; Martin, Reference Martin2014). Although many tracks cannot be assigned to a given species or even genus, tracks can be useful for higher-level taxonomy, providing evidence for certain taxa that might not be evident from body fossils in a given stratigraphic layer (Retallack, Reference Retallack1996; Lucas, Reference Lucas1998; Klein and Lucas, Reference Klein and Lucas2010b).

On the eastern coast of New South Wales, the Hawkesbury Series (Sydney Basin) is regarded as the best example of Australia's Early to Middle Triassic terrestrial record (Kear and Hamilton-Bruce, Reference Kear and Hamilton-Bruce2011). Nevertheless, vertebrate body fossils from this interval are extremely rare. The Narrabeen Group—the lowest subdivision of the Hawkesbury Series—preserves several temnospondyl amphibians, including Platycepsion wilkinsoni Stephens, Reference Stephens1887, the holotype of ‘Parotosaurus wadei’ Damiani, Reference Damiani2001 (= Watsonisuchus sp.), and the capitosaurid Bulgosuchus gargantua Damiani, Reference Damiani1999 (Stephens, Reference Stephens1887; Damiani and Warren, Reference Damiani and Warren1997; Damiani, Reference Damiani1999, Reference Damiani2001).

The overlying Hawkesbury Sandstone has produced one identifiable temnospondyl—Subcyclotosaurus brookvalensis Watson, Reference Watson1958 (Stephens, Reference Stephens1887; Watson, Reference Watson1958; Cosgriff, Reference Cosgriff1973; Retallack et al., Reference Retallack, Sheldon, Carr, Fanning, Thompson, Williams, Jones and Hutton2011). The youngest subdivision of the Hawkesbury Series—the Wiannamatta Group—includes three amphibians: Notobrachyops picketti Cosgriff, Reference Cosgriff1973, Microposaurus averyi Warren, Reference Warren2012, and Paracyclotosaurus davidi Watson, Reference Watson1958 (Watson, Reference Watson1958; Cosgriff, Reference Cosgriff1973; Warren, Reference Warren2012). Unlike the other temnospondyls from the Sydney Basin, Paracyclotosaurus davidi is represented by a nearly complete skeleton (Watson, Reference Watson1958) with a total estimated body length of 2.08 m (Retallack et al., Reference Retallack, Sheldon, Carr, Fanning, Thompson, Williams, Jones and Hutton2011). Only the capitosaurid Bulgosuchus gargantua might have been larger, with an estimated length of 2.3 m (Damiani, Reference Damiani1999). All other temnospondyl materials represent individuals < ~20 cm in length, although M. averyi might have been up to 1.45 m in total length (Warren, Reference Warren2012).

Reptiles from the Sydney Basin are exclusively represented by two associated anterior dorsal vertebrae from the Bulgo Sandstone (Narrabeen Group). Although initially identified as a possible proterosuchid (Kear, Reference Kear2009), they were subsequently identified as an indeterminate Erythrosuchidae (Ezcurra, Reference Ezcurra2016).

Trackways augment the tetrapod body-fossil record from the Sydney Basin (Fletcher, Reference Fletcher1948; Sherwin, Reference Sherwin1969; Pepperell and Grigg, Reference Pepperell and Grigg1974; Retallack, Reference Retallack1996). A large amphibian trackway (glenoacetabular length = 106 cm) from the Wianamatta Group was described from a sewage tunnel at Macquarie Fields (Pepperell and Grigg, Reference Pepperell and Grigg1974) and therapsid footprints (Dicynodontipus bellambiensis Retallack, Reference Retallack1996) have been described from the upper Permian/Lower Triassic Coalcliff Sandstone (Retallack, Reference Retallack1996). The latter were interpreted as a possible species of Lystrosaurus based on scale impressions, claw marks, phalangeal formula (2-3-3-3-3), and a pentadactyl manus/pes (Retallack, Reference Retallack1996).

The Berowra trackway

In the 1940s, a trackway consisting of primarily didactyl manus and pes prints (AM F145167–F145171) was discovered by Geoffrey Scarrott at his sandstone quarry in the Sydney suburb of Berowra (Fig. 1.1, 1.2). These tracks were briefly described by Fletcher (Reference Fletcher1948) who determined that the tracks belonged to a short-tailed reptile based on the absence of a central tail furrow (tail drag). Curiously, Sherwin (Reference Sherwin1969), when referring to the Berowra trackway and a second sequence from the nearby suburb of Annangrove (also from the Hawkesbury Sandstone), noted rare tail-drag marks, but did not specify the specimen to which he was referring. The Annangrove specimen was never figured and no specimen number was given. In their popular book, Willis and Thomas (Reference Willis and Thomas2005, p. 119) also briefly mentioned the Berowra trackway and interpreted ‘the curved grooves as being the marks where the tail dragged across the ground behind the animal,’ denoting a terrestrial origin for the Berowra tracks. The footprints were interpreted to have been made by an individual walking on soft wet sand on the shore of a lake or estuary subject to water fluctuations (Fletcher, Reference Fletcher1948). Importantly, these tracks remain the only putative evidence of reptiles in the Hawkesbury Sandstone, although rare reptile remains (Erythrosuchidae gen. indet. sp. indet.) have been identified from the older Narrabeen Group (Kear, Reference Kear2009; Ezcurra, Reference Ezcurra2016).

Figure 1. Archival photographs of the Berowra trackway (AM F145167–145171) during excavation at Geoffrey Scarrott's sandstone quarry in the 1940s. Clear crossbedding of the Hawkesbury Sandstone member is visible in (2). The direction of travel of the trackmaker is indicated by arrows. Photographs taken by Howard Hughes and acquired from the Archives of the Australian Museum.

The Annangrove tracks briefly noted by Sherwin (Reference Sherwin1969) evidently consist of well-preserved, concave, epirelief molds that share similarly elongated didactyl digits to the Berowra trackway (Sherwin, Reference Sherwin1969). The arrangement of these prints, ostensibly with faint and discontinuous tail-drag marks and the absence of belly-drag marks (Sherwin [Reference Sherwin1969] did not distinguish between the Berowra and Annangrove trackways in his interpretation), was interpreted to represent a stereospondyl amphibian similar to Platycepsion wilkinsoni or Paracyclotosaurus davidi (see Sherwin, Reference Sherwin1969).

Since Fletcher's (Reference Fletcher1948) original report, increased taxonomic sampling from the Sydney Basin and the global proliferation of ichnological (including neontological) studies from the Triassic (Peabody, Reference Peabody1948; Lammers, Reference Lammers1964; Pepperell and Grigg, Reference Pepperell and Grigg1974; Damiani and Warren, Reference Damiani and Warren1997; McAllister and Kirby, Reference McAllister and Kirby1998; Damiani, Reference Damiani1999, Reference Damiani2001; Kear, Reference Kear2009; Thomson and Lovelace, Reference Thomson and Lovelace2014; Thomson and Droser, Reference Thomson and Droser2015a, Reference Thomson and Droserb), affords the opportunity to reassess the origin of the Berowra trackway. Here, we describe the Berowra tracks in detail for the first time and, aided by photogrammetry and archival photographs, provide an alternative interpretation of the trackway.

Geological and paleoenvironmental setting

The Sydney Basin, on the southeastern coast of Australia, is made up of the Triassic Hawkesbury Series, which consists of four divisions (from oldest to youngest): the Narrabeen Group, the Hawkesbury Sandstone, the Mittagong Formation, and the Wianamatta Group (Fig. 2; Young, Reference Young, Young and Laurie1996; Damiani, Reference Damiani1999). The Anisian Hawkesbury Sandstone, which is the subject of this study, is up to 250 m thick and is characterized by meter-scale, quartz-rich, cross-bedded sandstones with minor interbedded shales (Herbert, Reference Herbert1980, Reference Herbert and Herbert1983).

Figure 2. (1) Map of the northeastern part of the Sydney Basin showing the Berowra Creek locality (star) and regional extent of the Hawkesbury Sandstone (light gray). Arrowhead on the inset map of Australia identifies the position of the Sydney Basin. (2) Chronostratigraphic chart of the Hawkesbury Series showing stratigraphic position of the Berowra trackway and all significant vertebrate body fossils (redrawn and modified from Damiani, Reference Damiani1999). Clstn = Claystone.

During the late Permian to Middle Triassic, tectonic uplift of the Lachlan Fold Belt in the southwestern part of the Sydney Basin led to down-dip deposition of quartzose sand, which formed the Hawkesbury Sandstone (Herbert, Reference Herbert1980). These sands were deposited by northeasterly flowing, high-energy braided rivers (Herbert, Reference Herbert1980; Totterdell et al., Reference Totterdell, Bradshaw, Owen, Hashimoto and Hall2014) on a broad, energetic, moderately sloping alluvial plain (Miall and Jones, Reference Miall and Jones2003).

During episodic periods of sea-level rise and fall (Herbert, Reference Herbert1980; Rust and Jones, Reference Rust and Jones1987), some water bodies became cut off from the main river systems, creating isolated channels and pools of water (Herbert, Reference Herbert1997). These ponds, represented as shale lenses within the Hawkesbury Sandstone (Herbert, Reference Herbert1997), have produced most of Hawkesbury fauna, including fossils of Lagerstätten quality (Fletcher, Reference Fletcher1948; Standard, Reference Standard and Packham1969). On the other hand, the sandstone beds of the Hawkesbury Sandstone are usually considered unfossiliferous, with the exception of the Berowra Creek ‘reptile tracks’ and preserved microflora (Fletcher, Reference Fletcher1948; Helby, Reference Helby and Packham1969; Standard, Reference Standard and Packham1969).

As with other exposures of the Hawkesbury Sandstone, rocks exposed at Scarrott's quarry at Berowra are laminated and can be split perfectly, which has led to their widespread use as local building material (Fletcher, Reference Fletcher1948). Archival photographs (Fig. 1.1, 1.2) show clear, large-scale crossbedding exposed at Scarrott's quarry, which is characteristic of the Hawkesbury Sandstone and typical of lateral accretion and downstream accretionary surfaces on sandbars within a braided river system (Miall, Reference Miall1977; Rust and Jones, Reference Rust and Jones1987; Miall and Jones, Reference Miall and Jones2003).

Materials and methods

To differentiate and avoid confusion with fully terrestrial conditions in dry or moist substrata (track, tracks, and trackway), McAllister (Reference McAllister, Gillette and Lockley1989) proposed an alternate terminology for subaqueous traces made by buoyant tetrapods (footmark, footmarks, and traceway). This scheme has not been widely adopted and we herein employ traditional terminology (track, trackway) in keeping with its more common usage in the literature, while recognizing the subaqueous formation of the tracks described here (see Description and Discussion).

The Berowra trackway is distributed across nine sandstone slabs that were cemented together and put on public display at the Australian Museum in Sydney (Fig. 3.1); however, four of these slabs are now missing (Fig. 3.2). One of these slabs was located at the Kalkari Discovery Centre (in Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park, Mount Colah, New South Wales) but could not be accessed and the position of this slab within the sequence remains unknown. The remaining five slabs (AM F145167–145171) include the partial counterpart (AM F145171) of a slab that had been cemented into the main track-bearing slab as part of the museum exhibit (Fig. 3.2, slabs E, F; Table 1). These two pieces (of which only the counterpart remains) are certainly related to the main sequence based on both lithology and track morphology, but their precise relationship and where they potentially sit within the trackway remains unclear. One other slab (AM F145166; Fig. 4.14.4) found in storage together with an archival photo of the Berowra trackway preserves morphologically similar, but significantly larger, didactyl traces compared to the other slabs (AM F145167–145171; Figs. 4.14.4, 5.15.12); however, whether AM F145166 (Fig. 4.14.4) originated from the Berowra Creek locality, the Annangrove trackway described by Sherwin (Reference Sherwin1969), or another locality is unknown.

Figure 3. The Berowra trackway (AM F145167–145171): (1) Historic photo taken in the 1950s showing the trackway in its entirety (~4.2 m long) while on display at the Australian Museum (photograph from the Archives of the Australian Museum). (2) Interpretive drawing of the entire trackway showing the missing slabs (white) and those that were available for firsthand observation (gray). Dashed lines demarcate the individual slabs here designated a–i. Slabs e and f represent the part and incomplete counterpart of the same traces that were cemented into the display, although their precise placement with respect to the main trackway is unknown. Heavy dashed lines represent hypothetical boundaries observed in archival images; fine dashed lines represent firsthand observations of boundaries between slabs. (3) Interpretive illustration of the main trackway with key features and measurements noted. Note that the right-sided manus and pes impressions are angled inward toward the midline of the trackway. The two highest angle values are recorded. Roman numerals identify the tridactyl (i) and monodactyl (ii) traces shown in Fig. 5. See text for explanation of hiatus #1 and hiatus #2. Scale bar here pertains to (1−3). (4) Height map of the surviving slabs a, b, c, d, and f. (5) Height map of slab f (AM F145171) representing the positive epirelief counterpart to the missing slab e. LM = left manus; LP = left pes; RM = right manus; RP = right pes.

Figure 4. Isolated slab of primarily didactyl tracks (AM F145166), possibly representing the ‘Annangrove tracks’ reported by Sherwin (Reference Sherwin1969): (1, 4) textured photogrammetric model, in top (1) and oblique (4) views; (2) interpretive illustration of (1); (3) height map of (1). Numbers in (2) correspond to individual impressions; see numbering scheme in Table 4.

Figure 5. Photographs and interpretive outlines of representative monodactyl (1–4), didactyl (7–12), and tridactyl (5–6) traces from the Berowra trackway (AM F145167–145171). Photographs (1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11) and interpretive outlines (2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12) correspond to the tracks labelled in Fig. 3.3: (1, 2) ii; (3, 4) LM2; (5, 6) I; (7, 8) LP2; (9, 10) LP1; (11, 12) LM1. L = left; M = manus; P = pes. Scale bars = 2 cm.

Table 1. Lengths (cm) of digits 1 and 2 of the part (missing) and counterpart (AM F145171) of the Berowra trackway; digits ordered medially to laterally, which might not represent the actual order. Negative ichnites (molds) were measured digitally. Positive ichnites (casts) were measured firsthand; measurements marked with an asterisk (*) are highly tentative because the borders of the digits were not clear.

Archival images provided by the Australian Museum were vital in reconstruction of the trackway and were the basis for many measurements. Photogrammetric models were constructed of the available slabs (Fig. 3.2, slabs A–D; AM F145167–145170), as well as two additional slabs (AM F145171, Fig. 3.2, slab F; AM F145166, Fig. 4). Photographs were taken using a Sony Alpha 6000 DSLR camera and input into Agisoft Photoscan Professional (Agisoft LLC) to create 3D models. Meshlab (Visual Computing Lab) was used to create lighting for the 3D models to show depth. Digital elevation models were created using CloudCompare (http://www.cloudcompare.org/); however, the maps were produced with different colors to best represent negative/positive ichnites. Direct measurements of the slabs (AM F145166, 145167–145171) were used to calibrate the digital measurement tool using ImageJ (https://imagej.net) to obtain additional measurements from both trackways. Standard track parameters were used for pace, stride, glenoacetabular length, trackway width, and digit length. For the didactyl traces, digits were identified as digit III and IV on the basis that these digits penetrate deepest into the substratum (sensu Leonardi, Reference Leonardi1987). Pace angulation and digit divarication values were measured using ImageJ (Fig. 3.3).

Slabs A, B, C, D, and F (Fig. 3.2; AM F145167–145171) were available for firsthand study and descriptions of the missing slabs (Fig. 3.3, slabs E, G, H, and I) were based solely on archival photos (Fig. 3.1). Manus and pes impressions were determined based on the trackways of a large sample of extinct (Peabody, Reference Peabody1948; Baird, Reference Baird1957; Ginsburg et al., Reference Ginsburg, Lapparent, Loiret and Taquet1966; Sarjeant and Stringer, Reference Sarjeant and Stringer1978; Azerêdo, Reference Azerêdo1993; Azerêdo et al., Reference Azerêdo, Ramalho, Santos and Galopim de Carvalho1995; Wilson and Carrano, Reference Wilson and Carrano1999; Lockley and Meyer, Reference Lockley and Meyer2000; Day et al., Reference Day, Upchurch, Norman, Gale and Powell2002; Rogers and Wilson, Reference Rogers and Wilson2005; Santos et al., Reference Santos, Moratalla and Royo-Torres2009; Klein and Lucas, Reference Klein and Lucas2010a; Marchetti et al., Reference Marchetti, Santi and Avanzini2014) and extant tetrapods (Huene, Reference Huene1913; Padian and Olsen, Reference Padian and Olsen1984a, Reference Padian and Olsenb; Carpenter, Reference Carpenter2009) in which prints closest to the midline are interpreted as the manus and the pes prints are farther away from the midline.

Repository and institutional abbreviation

Specimens and archival images examined during this study are deposited in the Australian Museum (AM), Sydney.

Results

Description of the Berowra trackway (AM F145167–F145171)

The main part of the trackway consists of a series of concave epirelief molds, however, one slab (Fig. 3.2, slab F; AM F145171) forming the counterpart of slab E (the latter of which is now missing) consists of convex hyporelief casts (Table 1). From the surviving slabs and archival photographs, there are no signs of any tail- or body-drag marks, as was also noted by Fletcher (Reference Fletcher1948, but in contradiction to Willis and Thomas, Reference Willis and Thomas2005 and possibly Sherwin, Reference Sherwin1969). Based on archival images of the trackway during excavation (Fig. 1.1, 1.2), the trackmaker was travelling upslope (from right to left in Fig. 3.13.4) as was also noted by Fletcher (Reference Fletcher1948).

At least 35 individual manus/pes traces form a discontinuous sequence travelling from right to left (Fig. 3.13.3). An additional 29 tracks are preserved in the part and counterpart (collectively) that were cemented into the display panel (Fig 3.2; slabs E and F; Table 1). Individual tracks are primarily didactyl and subdigitigrade, although less common monodactyl and tridactyl impressions are also present (Figs. 3.13.5, 5.15.12). Low crescents of displaced sediment are present immediately posterior to many of the traces (Fletcher, Reference Fletcher1948). Digit traces of both mani and pedes generally consist of isolated impressions (i.e., the hypex between digits and the heel is never preserved) of variable lengths (mean right manus = 2.8 cm, N = 5; mean right pes = 3.0 cm, N = 6) with sharp-to-rounded terminations (Table 2). Only the outer-digit trace of the pes appears to differ from this general configuration in which it sometimes forms a relatively short, arcuate (concave medially) impression. Both manual and pedal traces (excluding monodactyl traces) have variable digit-divarication angles ranging from acute (13–44°) to subparallel or even convergent (Fig. 3.13.3; Table 3).

Table 2. Digit lengths and means (cm) for AM F145167–145170. Digits are numbered from medial to lateral as preserved and might not represent the actual digit position on the skeleton. * = firsthand measurements (all other measurements taken using ImageJ); LM = left manus; LP = left pes; RM = right manus; RP = right pes.

Table 3. Manus and pes measurements for pace, pace angulation, and stride (AM F145167–145170). LM = left manus; LP = left pes; RM = right manus; RP = right pes.

The trackway is discontinuous, stopping and starting abruptly at two separate points in the succession. The trackway commences with a series of four mono- to tridactyl traces that all appear to pertain to the left side of the animal based on their alignment with the remainder of the trackway. Based on the truncated edge of the preserved slabs (Fig. 3.2, slabs A and B), it is unclear whether the right-sided traces were never preserved or if they were simply not collected. A hiatus in the trace progression follows the fourth trace before it resumes with a series of five-to-six manus and pes pairings (Fig. 3.3, hiatus #1). Left and right manus/pes traces are asymmetrical: those on the right side are inwardly rotated (up to 54° to the direction of travel), whereas those on the left are subparallel or outwardly rotated relative to the trackway midline (Fig. 3.3; Table 3). A second hiatus follows before the trackway resumes with a less distinct series of five mono- to didactyl traces, although identification of distinct manus/pes pairings was not possible because the relevant slabs are now missing and could not be observed firsthand (Fig. 3.3, hiatus #2).

Estimates of pes/manus stride and pace lengths were similar but varied considerably between manus and pes pairings (Table 3). Trackway width (31 cm) is between ~80% and 60% of the glenoacetabular length (37.1 cm based on short coupling; 50 cm based on long coupling) and can therefore be considered wide gauge. Manus pace angulation (46.8–82.9°) is, on average, greater than that of the pes (37.1–63.7°), consistent with the track configuration of reptiles and amphibians (Leonardi, Reference Leonardi1987). Some evidence of homopody throughout the trackway is present between the manus and pes pairings, although individual traces are highly variable and not necessarily reflective of the true manus/pes morphology. Phalangeal pad impressions and distinct claw marks are not preserved.

Description of AM F145166

An additional slab identified during this study has the same coloration and sedimentary composition as, but probably does not pertain to, the Berowra trackway (Fig. 4.14.4). Sherwin (Reference Sherwin1969) briefly described a trackway from Annangrove that had similar traces to the Berowra trackway. It is possible that the current specimen (AM F145166) is that described by Sherwin (Reference Sherwin1969) although he never figured it or provided a specimen number to help confirm this possibility. Regardless, the sandstone matrix in which the traces are preserved appears virtually identical to the Berowra slabs (AM F145167–145171), suggesting that it also derives from the Hawkesbury Sandstone (Fig. 4.14.4). The specimen consists of monodactyl (N = 4) and didactyl (N = 8) traces (concave epirelief) that are arranged into four equally spaced ‘rows,’ each row consisting of alternating short and long traces oriented parallel to the presumed direction of travel (i.e., each short/long trace is parallel to the ‘row’ that they are part of) (Fig. 4.14.4). Thus, it is possible that the trackway represents the passage of as many as three adjacent individuals with the track numbers 1-2, 3-10, and 11-12 of Fig 4.2 representing different individuals; however, unambiguous distinction of left and right or even between manus and pes is not possible (see below).

For the sake of the following description, the longer traces are regarded as pedes and the shorter traces are regarded as mani. The long (pes) traces are either monodactyl or didactyl—presumably representing variation in the registration of the pes with the substratum—and, where measurable, have acute divarication angles (~0–29°). Remarkably, nearly all pedal traces have digit impressions that are curved in the same direction, thus it is not possible to distinguish between left and right pedes: the digit impressions are arcuate with sharp-to-rounded terminations, and, in the didactyl traces, have one digit (always that on the right side of each impression) slightly longer than the other. Where present, the acutely pointed heel is deeply impressed (Fig. 4.3).

The shorter (manus) morphotype also includes both monodactyl and didactyl traces, the digits of which are typically subtriangular with sharp terminations (Fig. 4.14.4). The manual digits are subparallel and the spacing between the digits is greater than that of the pes (Fig. 4.14.4; Table 4). A hypex is rarely preserved and thus traces can be interpreted as digitigrade rather than calcigrade (Fig. 4.14.4). Nearly all traces (manus and pes) include a sand crescent posterior to the trace (Fig. 4.3). Both morphotypes differ from the Berowra ichnites (AM F145167–145171) in their larger size (Tables 2, 4) and the preservation of the heel and a hypex in at least some of the traces.

Table 4. Digit lengths (cm) for AM F145166. Digits are numbered from the left to right as preserved (see Fig. 4.2) and might not represent the actual digit positions on the skeleton. All measurements were made firsthand.

Discussion

Reports of fossilized, subaqueous tetrapod tracks are scattered throughout the literature and pertain to a wide range of taxonomic groups (Peabody, Reference Peabody1948, Reference Peabody1956, Reference Peabody1959; Lammers, Reference Lammers1964; Coombs, Reference Coombs1980; Currie, Reference Currie1983; McAllister, Reference McAllister, Gillette and Lockley1989; McAllister and Kirby, Reference McAllister and Kirby1998; Milner et al., Reference Milner, Lockley and Kirkland2006; Ezquerra et al., Reference Ezquerra, Doublet, Costeur, Galton and Pérez-Lorente2007; Romilio et al., Reference Romilio, Tucker and Salisbury2013; Xing et al., Reference Xing, Lockley, Zhang, Milner, Klein, Li, Persons and Ebi2013; Thomson and Lovelace, Reference Thomson and Lovelace2014; Thomson and Droser, Reference Thomson and Droser2015b; Milner and Lockley, Reference Milner, Lockley, Falkingham, Marty and Richter2016). Such traces can be difficult to identify and interpret because they are inherently variable and incomplete.

McAllister (Reference McAllister, Gillette and Lockley1989) defined several criteria important for interpreting subaqueous marks left by swimming tetrapods based on diverse footmarks from the Dakota Formation in Kansas. These include: (1) posterior overhang of the sediment; (2) reflecture of the digits; (3) a sharp increase in depth of the footmarks corresponding to the arc of a limb during propulsion; (4) elongation of the footmarks; and (5) striations parallel to the direction of movement. Other authors have identified additional criteria useful for distinguishing subaqueous tetrapod traces, however, morphological variation can also be expected from different tracemakers (varying body width/length, locomotor pattern, foot morphology, and speed), substrata (topography, consistency, and composition), and degree of buoyancy (which could be dependent on water depth). In addition to the traces themselves, sedimentological evidence (e.g., lack of shrinkage cracks or salt pseudomorphs, absence of ripple marks) can be useful supplementary evidence for identifying traces made in a subaqueous environment (Peabody, Reference Peabody1948). Regardless, the most important criterion for the recognition of subaqueous traces is evidence of buoyancy (McAllister, Reference McAllister, Gillette and Lockley1989).

The Berowra Creek tracks (AM F145167–145171) are interpreted to have been created by a swimming animal that was partially or completely submerged and affected by both buoyancy and current. Evidence supporting this interpretation include: (1) trackways that begin or end abruptly on undisturbed bedding planes with discontinuous sequences that can be laterally shifted from one another (Peabody, Reference Peabody1948; Brand and Tang, Reference Brand and Tang1991); (2) individual prints that are oriented in a different direction from that of the trackway axis (Brand and Tang, Reference Brand and Tang1991); (3) subparallel digit impressions (Brand, Reference Brand1996); (4) posterior overhang of the sediment (Boyd and Loope, Reference Boyd and Loope1984; McAllister, Reference McAllister, Gillette and Lockley1989); (5) reflecture of the digits (Boyd and Loope, Reference Boyd and Loope1984; McAllister, Reference McAllister, Gillette and Lockley1989); (6) elongation of footmarks/toe drags often parallel to the direction of movement (Lockley et al., Reference Lockley, Houck and Prince1986; McAllister, Reference McAllister, Gillette and Lockley1989); and (7) isolated or incomplete digit or pes/manus impressions (Peabody, Reference Peabody1948; Currie, Reference Currie1983; Lockley, Reference Lockley1986). Our interpretation therefore differs from the initial assessment of the trackway made by Fletcher (Reference Fletcher1948), who considered the tracks to have been made subaerially.

Furthermore, the trackmaker is here interpreted to have been travelling in opposition to the flow of water as evidenced by: (1) strong asymmetry between left and right tracks (right manus/pes traces in-turned relative to the trackway axis (Ezquerra et al., Reference Ezquerra, Doublet, Costeur, Galton and Pérez-Lorente2007); (2) the start and abrupt stop of tracks along the trackway showing incomplete step and stride preservation and the directional shift toward the right of the midline (Brand and Tang, Reference Brand and Tang1991); and (3) the upslope direction of travel in opposition to the dip of the cross beds (paleoflow indicated by the direction of dip of the crossbeds; e.g., Boggs, Reference Boggs2011).

It is unclear whether the associated slab (AM F145166) originated from the Annangrove trackway reported by Sherwin (Reference Sherwin1969). Several points, however, indicate that AM F145166 was probably not part of the Berowra trackway. Digit lengths are variable but relatively short in AM F145167–145171 (1.3–4.5 cm; Table 2) compared to those on AM F145166 (4.9–12.7 cm; Table 4). In addition, the elongated digits and prominent posterior sand crescents and the occasional presence of a heel and hypices on AM F145166 suggest that the tracemaker was less buoyant (in shallower water) and was able to register more of its weight on the substratum (Brand and Tang, Reference Brand and Tang1991; Brand, Reference Brand1996). The unusual arrangement of the traces into ‘rows’ (possibly representing the course of two or more animals) further differentiate them from AM F145167–145171. AM F145166 nevertheless lacks diagnostic features that can be used to confidently identify the trackmaker, although the morphological similarities (mono- and didactyl traces with curved digit impressions) with AM F145167–145171 suggest that they were made by a similar animal (or animals) to the Berowra trackmaker.

Determining the trackmaker

Because of the incomplete registration of the manus/pes and the vagaries of subaqueously-formed traces, determining the trackmaker(s) for both AM F145167–145171 and AM F145166 is fraught with difficulty. In the absence of more complete manus/pes tracks, the most useful evidence for determining the identity of the Berowra tracemaker is the approximate body length determined by the glenoacetabular length. Unfortunately, there is no overlap of the manus and pes traces, therefore it cannot be determined whether the tracemaker was a short-coupled or long-coupled organism. If the organism was short-coupled, the glenoacetabular length of the tracemaker was, at most, ~37 cm, with a body length of ~80 cm. Alternatively, if the organism was long-coupled, the glenoacetabular length would have been ~50 cm, making the animal ~135 cm in length. At any rate, these measurements are highly tentative, given that track-derived measurements of glenoacetabular length can be longer than the actual length (Brand and Tang, Reference Brand and Tang1991) and that the trackmaker was at least partially submerged and paddling against a current, making it unlikely that the traces accurately represent the glenoacetabular length.

Most of the known temnospondyls from the Sydney Basin fall well below the estimated body length of the Berowra tracemaker, although most of these are represented by single specimens and/or juveniles (e.g., Notobrachyops picketti, Platycepsion wilkinsoni, Subcyclotosaurus brookvalensis, Watsonisuchus sp.) with body lengths of < ~25 cm (Warren and Marsicano, Reference Warren and Marsicano2000; Damiani, Reference Damiani2001; Retallack et al., Reference Retallack, Sheldon, Carr, Fanning, Thompson, Williams, Jones and Hutton2011). Therefore, maximum body lengths are unknown for many taxa.

The largest of the Narrabeen Group amphibians, Bulgosuchus gargantua, has an estimated total body length of > 2.3 m (Damiani, Reference Damiani1999), which is greater than the body length estimates of the Berowra tracemaker. However, a small B. garantua individual would have been potentially capable of producing traces equivalent in size to those of the Berowra trackway. Similarly, a small individual of Paracyclotosaurus davidi (Wianamatta Group) could conceivably have been responsible for the Berowra trackway (body length ~2.08 m based on the only known specimen; Watson, Reference Watson1958; Retallack et al., Reference Retallack, Sheldon, Carr, Fanning, Thompson, Williams, Jones and Hutton2011). The phalangeal formula of Paracyclotosaurus davidi (both manus and pes 2-2-3-3-2) also indicates that it had two longer digits in both the manus and pes and thus might have been capable of producing primarily didactyl traces under certain subaqueous conditions (Watson, Reference Watson1958). Whether or not the manual and pedal phalangeal formula of Paracyclotosaurus davidi is exclusive of the other Sydney Basin temnospondyls is unknown because phalangeal material is lacking for these other taxa. Furthermore, the manus and pes of Paracyclotosaurus davidi are morphologically similar (Watson, Reference Watson1958) and their resulting traces would have been comparable (homopodous), as is also the case for the Berowra trackway. Finally, Microposaurus averyi (also Wianamatta Group) has a skull length of ~40 cm, with an estimated body length of ~1.45 m (Warren, Reference Warren2012), which is comparable to the long-coupled body-length estimate of the Berowra tracemaker (~1.35 m).

The only diagnostic reptile from the Hawkesbury Series, the so-called Long Reef erythrosuchid, is known from only two dorsal vertebrae (Kear, Reference Kear2009; Ezcurra, Reference Ezcurra2016). The centra measure 28.9 mm and 26.3 mm in height, respectively (Kear, Reference Kear2009), similar to the anterior dorsal centra of Garjainia madiba Gower et al., Reference Gower, Hancox, Botha-Brink, Sennikov and Butler2014 (~28 mm; Gower et al., Reference Gower, Hancox, Botha-Brink, Sennikov and Butler2014), which has a total adult body length estimated at ~2.5 m (Gower et al., Reference Gower, Hancox, Botha-Brink, Sennikov and Butler2014) and which provides an approximate guide to the length of the Long Reef erythrosuchid. Erythrosuchids (including the Long Reef erythrosuchid and G. madiba) probably assumed a sprawling posture in life (Bernardi et al., Reference Bernardi, Klein, Petti and Ezcurra2015). Initial suggestions posited that erythrosuchids and proterosuchids were capable of creating Protochirotherium Fichter and Kunz, Reference Fichter and Kunz2004 footprints (Klein and Neidzwiedzki, Reference Klein and Neidzwiedzki2012; Klein et al., Reference Klein, Niedźwiedzki, Voigt, Lagnaoui, Hminna, Saber and Schneider2013). However, Protochirotherium trackways are narrow and inconsistent with a sprawling trackmaker. Conversely, erythrosuchids might have produced chirotheriid (Abel, Reference Abel1935) or chirotheriid-like tracks (Bernardi et al., Reference Bernardi, Klein, Petti and Ezcurra2015). Chirotheriid or chirotheriid-like footprints differ from the Berowra traces significantly in shape, size, and phalangeal formula (digit arrangement; Bernardi et al., Reference Bernardi, Klein, Petti and Ezcurra2015), rendering an erythrosuchid origin unlikely.

The Berowra tracks differ from those of other trackways reported from the Sydney Basin. The amphibian trackmaker reported from the Wianamatta Group had a glenoacetabular length of 106 cm and digits > 10 cm long (Pepperell and Grigg, Reference Pepperell and Grigg1974), revealing body proportions at least twice the size of the Berowra trackmaker. Moreover, these tracks were made in a subaerial setting and preserve clear tetradactyl pes and tridactyl manus pairings that differentiate them from the Berowra tracks.

Therapsid tracks (Dicynodontipus bellambiensis) from the Coalcliff Sandstone show pentadactyl manus and pes pairings consistent with a phalangeal formula of 2-3-3-3-3 (Retallack, Reference Retallack1996). With an estimated body length of ~84 cm, the D. bellambiensis trackmaker is intermediate between the short- and long-coupled tracemaker estimates for the Berowra tracemaker. The Berowra traces show a manus pace angulation that is greater than the pes pace angulation, indicative of an amphibian or reptile affinity (Leonardi, Reference Leonardi1987) and similar to D. bellambiensis (see Retallack, Reference Retallack1996). If our assumption is correct (that digits of III and IV of the Berowra tracemaker were longer than the remaining digits), the phalangeal formula of D. bellambiensis (2-3-3-3-3) is inconsistent with the traces created by the Berowra trackmaker. In addition to being made in different settings (subaerial versus subaqueous), D. bellambiensis tracks are also outwardly curved from the midline, rather than the slightly in-turned or parallel tracks displayed by the Berowra trackway (Fig. 1).

In summary, the Berowra trackway (AM F145167–145171) and, by extension, AM F145166, differs from all reported trackways from the Hawkesbury Series, the latter of which were all made under subaerial conditions. Whereas reptilian and therapsid origins are unlikely, at least three temnospondyls from the Hawkesbury Series fall within the range of body length estimates for the Berowra trackmaker and provide tenable candidates for the formation of these traces.

Ichnotaxonomic considerations

Swim trace ichnotaxonomy is ideally based on the number of digits and the relative lengths and widths of their impressions (Lockley and Foster, Reference Lockley and Foster2006). Characichnos Whyte and Romano, Reference Whyte and Romano2001 has traditionally been reserved for subaqueous tridactyl traces made by theropods (see Milner and Lockley, Reference Milner, Lockley, Falkingham, Marty and Richter2016) whose body-fossil record postdates the Hawkesbury traces by ~15 Myr. Nevertheless, Characichnos has also been applied to traces produced by a variety of nontheropod tracemakers, including phytosaurs (Milner et al., Reference Milner, Lockley and Kirkland2006), basal crocodylomorphs (Milner et al., Reference Milner, Lockley and Kirkland2006), crocodilians (Vila et al., Reference Vila, Castanera, Marmi, Canudo and Galobart2015), and indeterminate reptiles (Boyd and Loope, Reference Boyd and Loope1984; McAllister and Kirby, Reference McAllister and Kirby1998; Thomson and Lovelace, Reference Thomson and Lovelace2014; see also Milner and Lockley, Reference Milner, Lockley, Falkingham, Marty and Richter2016 and references therein). Hunt and Lucas (Reference Hunt and Lucas2007) even considered a Characichnos ichnofacies, which incorporated parallel scratch marks assigned to Characichnos and Hatcherichnus Foster and Lockley, Reference Foster and Lockley1997 (see below). Although commonly tridactyl, the number of digits is highly variable (from two to five in Characichnos) even within a single trace assemblage (Vila et al., Reference Vila, Castanera, Marmi, Canudo and Galobart2015), although Milner and Lockley (Reference Milner, Lockley, Falkingham, Marty and Richter2016) considered (pes) traces with four or more digits referable to the crocodilian ichnogenus, Hatcherichnus (see also Foster and Lockley, Reference Foster and Lockley1997; Lockley and Foster, Reference Lockley and Foster2006). The obviously quadrupedal Hawkesbury tracemaker differs from bipedal theropod swim traces (e.g., Characichnos, and possibly Wintonopus Romilio, Tucker, and Salisbury, Reference Romilio, Tucker and Salisbury2013)—including the didactyl Paravipes Mudroch et al., Reference Mudroch, Richter, Joger, Kosma, Idé and Maga2010 (see Milner and Lockley, Reference Milner, Lockley, Falkingham, Marty and Richter2016)—and from crocodylomorphs (Hatcherichnus, Albertasuchipes McCrea, Pemberton, and Currie, Reference McCrea, Pemberton and Currie2004), which typically have higher digit counts (Foster and Lockley, Reference Foster and Lockley1997; McCrea et al., Reference McCrea, Pemberton and Currie2004; Milner and Lockley, Reference Milner, Lockley, Falkingham, Marty and Richter2016).

Amphibian swim traces are globally rare (Braddy et al., Reference Braddy, Morrissey and Yates2003). Most of these have been assigned to the ichnogenus Lunichnium Walter, Reference Walter1983, which has been considered by some authors as forming a continuum with the walking ichnogenus Batrachichnus Woodworth, Reference Woodworth1900 and which Petti et al. (Reference Petti, Bernardi, Ashley-Ross, Berra, Tessarollo and Avanzini2014) denoted as Batrachichnus C Lunichnium (where the C stands for continuum). Serpentichnus Braddy et al., Reference Braddy, Morrissey and Yates2003 from the early Permian of New Mexico represents an unusual ‘side-winding’ form of locomotion by a possible lysorophian tracemaker (Braddy et al., Reference Braddy, Morrissey and Yates2003) that is distinct from the Hawkesbury traces. Walter (Reference Walter1983) erected Lunichnium on the basis of material from the early Permian of Germany that he interpreted as the trackway of a swimming arthropod. Turek (Reference Turek1989) later reinterpreted these as temnospondyl swim traces based on additional material from the upper Carboniferous of the Czech Republic. Minter and Braddy (Reference Minter and Braddy2006, p. 1134) diagnosed Lunichnium as trackways composed of ‘discrete, paired curvilinear imprints that can bifurcate and are curved concave outwards’ and symmetrical between left and right sides. Following the reasoning of Petti et al. (Reference Petti, Bernardi, Ashley-Ross, Berra, Tessarollo and Avanzini2014), this definition cannot be used in isolation and naturally includes a broad spectrum of morphotypes along the Batrachichnus C Lunichnium continuum.

Nevertheless, the swim traces (i.e., Lunichnium, as defined by Minter and Braddy, Reference Minter and Braddy2006) compare poorly with those reported here from the Hawkesbury Sandstone; most of the didactyl traces described here consist of paired (not bifurcated), linear scratch marks that are rarely curved (in which case they are concave medially [e.g., Fig. 3.2, slabs E and F]; unclear in AM F145166) and strongly asymmetrical between left and right sides. AM F145166 does, on the other hand, include some bifurcated traces (Fig. 4.2) that bear some resemblance to the holotype of Lunichnium (Walter, Reference Walter1983). Many of the observed differences can probably be ascribed to differences in locomotion, water depth, current direction, substratum type/consistency, or any combination of these. We therefore refrain from assigning either AM F145167–145171 or AM F145166 to a particular ichnotaxon, but recognize their similarities (and distinctions) to Lunichnium-type amphibian traces.

AM F145167–145171 and AM F145166 therefore represent a unique, potentially amphibian (temnospondyl) trace type and the oldest tetrapod swimming traces from Australia. Australian tetrapod trackways that predate the Hawkesbury traces are limited to only three possible occurrences. One of these, from the Grampians region of Victoria (the ‘Glenisla’ homestead tracks), is either late Silurian or earliest Devonian in age and might not have been made by a tetrapod at all because these dates potentially predate the fish-tetrapod transition (Young, Reference Young2006). The Glenisla trackway, even if representative of a tetrapod, is thought to have been produced subaerially (Warren et al., Reference Warren, Jupp and Bolton1986; Gouramanis et al., Reference Gouramanis, Webb and Warren2003) and therefore does not represent a trackway comparable to the Berowra traces. Two additional trackways have been described from the Upper Devonian Merrimbula Group in Victoria. One of these shows digit impressions directed at right angles to the body, which suggests a different wrist and ankle configuration to the typical anteriorly directed early-tetrapod footprints (Young, Reference Young2006). The second trackway preserves a sinuous tail trace and manus impressions that are much smaller than those of the pes, similar those of the tetrapod Tulerpeton Lebedev, Reference Lebedev1984 (Clack, Reference Clack1997; Young, Reference Young2006). Associated mudcracks at the locality suggest a subaerial formation or, alternatively, a trackway created by a tetrapod walking through shallow water (Clack, Reference Clack1997; Young, Reference Young2006).

Conclusions

A reanalysis of a succession of unusual, wide-gauge, primarily didactyl traces from the Middle Triassic Hawkesbury Sandstone identifies these as the swimming traces of a buoyant or partially buoyant, large-bodied tetrapod (possibly amphibian; body length ~80–135 cm) tracemaker. These findings are in opposition to the original interpretation made by Fletcher (Reference Fletcher1948) who attributed the tracks to an unknown pentadactyl terrestrial reptile walking along an ancient shoreline.

Because swim traces do not accurately represent the true manual/pedal morphology of the trackmaker, confident identification of the animal is difficult. The primarily didactyl manus/pes traces show limited similarity to other quadrupedal amphibian swim traces in the Batrachichnus C Lunichnium continuum, but are unique in the linear arrangement of the digit impression and strong asymmetry between left and right sides. Trackway measurements do not match those of any known tetrapod from the Sydney Basin, although the temnospondyls Bulgosuchus gargantua, Microposaurus averyi, and Paracyclotosaurus davidi provide suitable candidates for the Berowra tracemaker based on body length estimates. Caution is nevertheless advised because our body length estimates for the Berowra trackmaker are based on tracks produced under subaqueous conditions. The primarily didactyl tracks could be the product of an individual that had two longer digits in the manus and pes, similar to Paracyclotosaurus davidi, but whether this condition is unique to Paracyclotosaurus davidi or shared among other Australian temnospondyls is unknown.

Although historically neglected because of its ambiguity, the two Hawkesbury trackways reported here are important because they represent the oldest tetrapod swimming trackways from Australia and a unique swimming morphotype of possible amphibian origin. These data contribute to the limited but important fossil record of the Hawkesbury Series, which is considered the best Australian Early to Middle Triassic terrestrial fauna. Although the identity of the trackmaker remains ambiguous, the Hawkesbury tracks further demonstrate the contribution of ichnology to the understanding of the Sydney Basin fauna.

Acknowledgments

We thank D. McGeeny, R. Pogson, A. Dejanovic, and C. Macgregor from the Australian Museum for specimen access; T. Mansson for creating casts of some of the ichnites; P. Egan and G. McLean for helping to locate archival images pivotal to this paper; and P. Smith for help with specimen numbers. Thanks also to A. Bell for assistance creating Fig. 2.1 and S. Poropat for advice and locating papers. M. White and A. Romilio provided helpful comments on an earlier version of the manuscript. We thank the editors, H.-D. Sues and J. Kastigar, as well as M. Lockley and T. Thomson, for their thoughtful reviews of the manuscript and providing helpful comments. Special thanks to L. Farman, O. Moreano Cuellar, M. Farman, and E. McCarthy for their support. This research was supported by an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (project ID: DE170101325) to PRB.

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Figure 0

Figure 1. Archival photographs of the Berowra trackway (AM F145167–145171) during excavation at Geoffrey Scarrott's sandstone quarry in the 1940s. Clear crossbedding of the Hawkesbury Sandstone member is visible in (2). The direction of travel of the trackmaker is indicated by arrows. Photographs taken by Howard Hughes and acquired from the Archives of the Australian Museum.

Figure 1

Figure 2. (1) Map of the northeastern part of the Sydney Basin showing the Berowra Creek locality (star) and regional extent of the Hawkesbury Sandstone (light gray). Arrowhead on the inset map of Australia identifies the position of the Sydney Basin. (2) Chronostratigraphic chart of the Hawkesbury Series showing stratigraphic position of the Berowra trackway and all significant vertebrate body fossils (redrawn and modified from Damiani, 1999). Clstn = Claystone.

Figure 2

Figure 3. The Berowra trackway (AM F145167–145171): (1) Historic photo taken in the 1950s showing the trackway in its entirety (~4.2 m long) while on display at the Australian Museum (photograph from the Archives of the Australian Museum). (2) Interpretive drawing of the entire trackway showing the missing slabs (white) and those that were available for firsthand observation (gray). Dashed lines demarcate the individual slabs here designated a–i. Slabs e and f represent the part and incomplete counterpart of the same traces that were cemented into the display, although their precise placement with respect to the main trackway is unknown. Heavy dashed lines represent hypothetical boundaries observed in archival images; fine dashed lines represent firsthand observations of boundaries between slabs. (3) Interpretive illustration of the main trackway with key features and measurements noted. Note that the right-sided manus and pes impressions are angled inward toward the midline of the trackway. The two highest angle values are recorded. Roman numerals identify the tridactyl (i) and monodactyl (ii) traces shown in Fig. 5. See text for explanation of hiatus #1 and hiatus #2. Scale bar here pertains to (1−3). (4) Height map of the surviving slabs a, b, c, d, and f. (5) Height map of slab f (AM F145171) representing the positive epirelief counterpart to the missing slab e. LM = left manus; LP = left pes; RM = right manus; RP = right pes.

Figure 3

Figure 4. Isolated slab of primarily didactyl tracks (AM F145166), possibly representing the ‘Annangrove tracks’ reported by Sherwin (1969): (1, 4) textured photogrammetric model, in top (1) and oblique (4) views; (2) interpretive illustration of (1); (3) height map of (1). Numbers in (2) correspond to individual impressions; see numbering scheme in Table 4.

Figure 4

Figure 5. Photographs and interpretive outlines of representative monodactyl (1–4), didactyl (7–12), and tridactyl (5–6) traces from the Berowra trackway (AM F145167–145171). Photographs (1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11) and interpretive outlines (2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12) correspond to the tracks labelled in Fig. 3.3: (1, 2) ii; (3, 4) LM2; (5, 6) I; (7, 8) LP2; (9, 10) LP1; (11, 12) LM1. L = left; M = manus; P = pes. Scale bars = 2 cm.

Figure 5

Table 1. Lengths (cm) of digits 1 and 2 of the part (missing) and counterpart (AM F145171) of the Berowra trackway; digits ordered medially to laterally, which might not represent the actual order. Negative ichnites (molds) were measured digitally. Positive ichnites (casts) were measured firsthand; measurements marked with an asterisk (*) are highly tentative because the borders of the digits were not clear.

Figure 6

Table 2. Digit lengths and means (cm) for AM F145167–145170. Digits are numbered from medial to lateral as preserved and might not represent the actual digit position on the skeleton. * = firsthand measurements (all other measurements taken using ImageJ); LM = left manus; LP = left pes; RM = right manus; RP = right pes.

Figure 7

Table 3. Manus and pes measurements for pace, pace angulation, and stride (AM F145167–145170). LM = left manus; LP = left pes; RM = right manus; RP = right pes.

Figure 8

Table 4. Digit lengths (cm) for AM F145166. Digits are numbered from the left to right as preserved (see Fig. 4.2) and might not represent the actual digit positions on the skeleton. All measurements were made firsthand.