Fauna includes tetrapods, fish, arthropods (horseshoe crabs, trilobites and ostracods) and shells. Fish material is quite common, but articulated bones are very rare. Most common are scales, small ribs and teeth. Uncommon are larger bones including fin spines, jaws, cranial material, clavicles, limb bones and pelvic bones. Arthropods include Paleolimulus woodae, an extinct horseshoe crab. Contrary to some erroneous reports in the popular press, it is not the world's oldest horseshoe crab (Order Xiphosurida), but is scientifically instead the oldest paleolimulid (Family Paleolimulidae). It is known from two examples found by visitors - including a Grade 4 student. The species name honors Sonja Wood who runs the Blue Beach Museum and has studied the fossils for many years along with her husband Chris Mansky.
Trilobites are also rarely found. This is interesting because trilobites are marine, whereas the majority of the Blue Beach location is seen as a lacustrine deposit. The trilobites found thus far are restricted to a thick layer.
Rhadinichthys,
?Ctenodus, Similarly, Dawson's
Acrolepis is now attributed to
Elonichthys and his
Palaeoniscus is attributed to
Canobis. Tetrapod fossils include
acanthostegids,
ichthyostegids,
tulerpetontids,
whatcheeriids, and
embolomeres. Blue_Beach_shell.jpg|Shell Blue_Beach_fish_scale.jpg|Fish scales Blue BEach jawbone.jpg|Fish jawbone with tooth Blue_Beach_clavicle.jpg|Clavicle Blue Beach fish fossils Dawson.jpg|Figure of fish fossils from Dawson's Acadian Geology ==Trace fossils==