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Pictured Cliffs Formation

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Geologic formation in New Mexico and Colorado
Pictured Cliffs Formation
Stratigraphic range: Campanian PreꞒ O S D C P T J K Pg N
Pictured Cliffs Formation at its type location near Fruitland, New Mexico
TypeGeological formation
UnderliesFruitland Formation
OverliesLewis Shale
Thickness60 feet (18 m)
Lithology
PrimarySandstone
Location
Coordinates36°44′14″N 108°25′40″W / 36.7373°N 108.4277°W / 36.7373; -108.4277
RegionNew Mexico
Country United States
Type section
Named forPictured Cliffs of the San Juan River
Named byW.H. Holmes
Year defined1877
Pictured Cliffs Formation is located in the United StatesPictured Cliffs FormationPictured Cliffs Formation (the United States)Show map of the United StatesPictured Cliffs Formation is located in New MexicoPictured Cliffs FormationPictured Cliffs Formation (New Mexico)Show map of New Mexico

The Pictured Cliffs Formation is a Campanian geologic formation in the San Juan Basin of New Mexico. Dinosaur remains are among the fossils that have been recovered from the formation, although none have yet been referred to a specific genus.

Description

The formation consists of yellowish-gray to grayish-orange cliff-forming sandstone. The upper beds are massive and crossbedded, consisting of well-sorted, fine-grained, friable sandstone. The lower beds are alternating thin beds of sandstone and light- to dark-gray silty shale. The upper part of the shale beds contains up to 6.5 feet (2.0 m) of discontinuous ironstone beds. The total thickness is about 60 feet (18 m). The formation is transitional with both the underlying Lewis Shale and the overlying Fruitland Formation.

The formation is interpreted as a marine littoral formation deposited during the final regression of the Western Interior Seaway from the San Juan Basin, with recognizable delta-front and barrier island facies. The regression was interrupted by at least three brief transgressions that produced tongues of the upper Pictured Cliff Sandstone in the northern San Juan Basin.

Fossils

The formation contains fossil marine invertebrates and trace fossil Ophiomorpha major, typical of a nearshore marine environment.

Economic geology

The formation serves as a reservoir rock for natural gas. Production by 1988 amounted to 87.7 x 10 cubic meters with remaining reserves estimated at that time as 127.4 x 10 cubic meters. The gas likely originated both in the underlying Lewis Shale and the coal beds of the overlying Fruitland Formation.

History of investigation

The formation was first described as the Pictured Cliffs group or Pictured Cliffs sandstone by W.H. Holmes in 1877.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Scott, O'Sullivan & Weide 1984.
  2. Weishampel, Dodson & Osmólska 2004, pp. 517–607, "Dinosaur distribution.".
  3. Flores & Erpenbeck 1981.
  4. Ambrose & Ayers 2007.
  5. Scott, Kaiser & Ayers 1991.
  6. Holmes 1877.

References

Chronostratigraphy of Colorado
Cenozoic chronostratigraphy of Colorado
Ph
Cz
Q
Pleistocene
N
Pliocene
Zanclean
Miocene
Messinian
Aquitanian
  • Grouse Mountain Basalt
  • Pe
    Oligocene
    Chattian
  • Arikaree Formation
  • Eocene
  • Blanco Basin Formation
  • Cuchara Formation
  • D2 Sequence
  • Dawson Arkose
  • Echo Park Formation
  • Farisita Formation
  • Huerfano Formation
  • Green River Formation
  • Poison Canyon Formation
  • Uinta Formation
  • Wasatch Formation
  • Paleocene
    Mesozoic chronostratigraphy of Colorado
    Ph
    Mz
    K
    Upper
  • Benton Formation
  • Carlile Shale
  • Castle Gate Formation
  • Cliff House Sandstone
  • Codell Sandstone
  • Dakota Group
  • Fort Hays Limestone
  • Fox Hills Formation
  • Fruitland Formation
  • Graneros Shale
  • Greenhorn Shale
  • Hygiene Formation
  • Juana Lopez
  • Kirtland Formation
  • Kremmling Formation
  • Lance Formation
  • Laramie Formation
  • Lewis Formation
  • Lion Canyon Formation
  • Mancos Shale
  • Menefee Formation
  • Mowry Shale
  • Niobrara Formation
  • Pando Porphyry
  • Pictured Cliffs Formation
  • Pierre Shale
  • Point Lookout Formation
  • Smoky Hill Chalk
  • Trinidad Formation
  • Vermejo Formation
  • Williams Fork Formation
  • Lower
    J
    Upper
    Middle
    Lower
    Tr
    Upper
    Middle
    Anisian
    Lower
    Olenekian
  • Chugwater Formation
  • Induan
    Paleozoic chronostratigraphy of Colorado
    Ph
    Pz
    P
    Lopingian
    Changhsingian
  • Chugwater Formation
  • Lykins Formation
  • Taloga Formation
  • Cisuralian
    Asselian
    C
    Gzhelian
  • Fountain Formation
  • Madera Formation
  • M
    Tournaisian
  • Williams Canyon Formation
  • D
    Upper
    Famennian
    O
    Upper
  • Fremont Limestone
  • Viola Formation
  • Middle
    Lower
    Tremadocian
    Є
    Furongian
    Stage 10
  • Dotsero Formation
  • Paibian
    Series 3
    Guzhangian
    Precambrian chronostratigraphy of Colorado
    Z
    Tonian
  • Uinta Mountain Group
  • X
    Siderian
  • Owiyukuts Complex
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