Английская Википедия:Glencairn Formation

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Шаблон:Infobox rockunit

The Glencairn Formation is a geologic formation found in Colorado[1] and New Mexico.[2] It preserves fossils characteristic of the Albian Age of the Cretaceous Period.[3]

Description

The Glencairn Formation consists of dark gray shale and buff sandstone and siltstone. It disconformably overlies the Lytle Formation, underlies the Dakota Group, and varies in thickness from Шаблон:Convert.[1][3] The formation is present from central Colorado[1] to the valley of the Dry Cimarron in northeastern New Mexico.[3] The formation locally contains gypsum veins and gypsum-filled desiccation cracks.[1]

The exposures at the valley of the Dry Cimarron include a basal sandstone bed, the Long Canyon Sandstone Bed, that is up to Шаблон:Convert thick, is heavily bioturbated, and contains an abundant late Albian invertebrate fossil fauna.[3] This is interpreted as infilling of a drainage system preceding the Kiowa-Skull Creek transgression.[4] It is likely the lateral equivalent of the Tucumcari Shale.[5]

Fossils

The lower beds of the formation are heavily bioturbated and contain abundant fossils of the gryphaeid oyster Texigryphea.[6] The upper beds locally contain petrified plant material.[3] The formation also contains ammonoids, including Goodhallites, Idiohamites, and Engonoceras uddeni, and associated solitary corals, bivalves, and gastropods[7]

History of investigation

The formation was first named as the Glencairn shale member of the now abandoned Purgatoire Formation by G.I. Finlay in 1916, for exposures near Lytle, Colorado.[1] Waage subsequently traced the unit into northeastern New Mexico,[2] where it has been raised to formation rank.[8][3]

References

Шаблон:Reflist