Rediscovery of a classic Middle Triassic fossil site of the Balaton Highland (Transdanubian
Range, Hungary): cephalopods, brachiopods and vertebrate remains from the Akol Hill
at Barnag
Recent collecting of the classic Middle Anisian fossil site of the Akol Hill at Barnag
(Nagyvázsony Plateau, Balaton Highland) yielded a plenty of new palaeontological data.The
Middle Anisian platform carbonate succession (Tagyon Formation) is overlain by 1-2
metres thick reddish, nodular, crinoidal limestone (Vászoly Formation) that contains
a very rich fossil assemblage with ammonoids, nautiloids and brachiopods. Some vertebrate
fossils were also found. Besides fish teeth, remains of marine reptiles are also present
in the fauna. Four vertebrae, a piece of a rib, as well as a tooth crown fragment
have also been found.Based on the geological buildup and the new biostratigraphic
data the active stage of the Barnag Platform was much shorter than that of the other
two Middle Anisian platforms of the Balaton Highland (Tagyon Platform, Kádárta Platform).
The ammonoid fauna of the lowermost thin limestone bed above the Tagyon Formation
contains elements reworked from the Balatonicus Zone. The overlying some beds contain
a very rich lower Illyrian ammonoid fauna which is more diverse than the equivalent
faunas of the Tagyon Platform and the Kádárta Platform. The ammonites of the Balatonicus
Zone in the basal part of the Vászoly Formation prove that the drowning of the Barnag
Platform occured even during the Pelsonian, earlier than in the case of the Tagyon
and the Kádárta Platforms where the oldest basin sediments are mid-Illyrian (Camunum
Subzone of the Trinodosus Zone) above the drowning surface.The Akol Hill locality
also provided the first known occurrence of ichthyosaurs like Cymbospondylus, predators
that probably dwelled mostly open marine environments but also might have been well
adapted for hunting in shallow environments like submarine highs.