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Chinle Formation

The Chinle Formation is an Upper Triassic continental geological formation of fluvial, lacustrine, and palustrine to eolian deposits spread across the U.S. states of Nevada, Utah, northern Arizona, western New Mexico, and western Colorado. In New Mexico, it is often raised to the status of a geological group, the Chinle Group. Some authors have controversially considered the Chinle to be synonymous to the Dockum Group of eastern Colorado and New Mexico, western Texas, the Oklahoma panhandle, and southwestern Kansas. The Chinle Formation is part of the Colorado Plateau, Basin and Range, and the southern section of the Interior Plains.[1] A probable separate depositional basin within the Chinle is found in northwestern Colorado and northeastern Utah. The southern portion of the Chinle reaches a maximum thickness of a little over 520 meters (1,710 ft). Typically, the Chinle rests unconformably on the Moenkopi Formation.

Chinle Formation
Stratigraphic range: Norian–Rhaetian
TypeGeological formation
Sub-unitssee text
UnderliesWingate Sandstone,
Moenave Formation,
Nugget Sandstone
OverliesMoenkopi Formation or Cutler Group
Lithology
Primaryfluvial mudstone, siltstone, and sandstone
Otherpaleosols
Location
Coordinates36°09′18″N 109°34′44″W / 36.155°N 109.579°W / 36.155; -109.579
RegionColorado Plateau
ExtentUtah
Colorado
New Mexico
Arizona
Nevada
Type section
Named forChinle, AZ
Named byHerbert E. Gregory
Chinle Formation (the United States)
Chinle Formation (Arizona)

Type locality in Arizona

The Chinle Formation was probably mostly deposited in the Norian stage, according to a plethora of chronological techniques. It is a thick and fossiliferous formation with numerous named members (subunits) throughout its area of deposition.

History of investigation edit

While colorful Triassic sediments of the Colorado Plateau have been investigated since the 19th century, the Chinle Formation was only formally named and described by Herbert E. Gregory in 1917. It was named for Chinle Valley in Apache County, Arizona, land which is largely within the Navajo Nation. Gregory did not designate a type locality. He split the Chinle into four subunits, labelled A (youngest) to D (oldest). This did not include the underlying Shinarump Conglomerate (named by G. K. Gilbert and Edwin E. Howell in 1875), which he considered a separate formation.[2]

United States Geological Survey geologists and paleontologists continued to map out the Chinle Formation through the 20th century, revising the unnamed subunits of Gregory. A basic stratigraphy of the formation was developed for north-central New Mexico by Wood and Northrop (1946),[3] and stratigraphy in the Four Corners Region was established by the late 1950s. In 1956, Economic geologist Raymond C. Robeck identified and named the Temple Mountain member as the basal-most unit in the area of the San Rafael Swell of Utah. In 1957, John H. Stewart revised the Shinarump Conglomerate and renamed it the Shinarump member of the Chinle formation.

Study of the formation expanded northwards into northern Utah and Colorado, facilitated through papers by Forrest G. Poole and Stewart (1964)[4] and Steve W. Sikich (1965),[5] who named informal local members equivalent to those of Arizona and New Mexico. The complete areal extent of the unit was mapped by R.F. Wilson and Stewart in 1967.[6] Stewart and his colleagues created an expansive overview and revision of the formation in 1972, summarizing previous knowledge on Chinle stratigraphy.[7]

V.C. Kelley assigned more members and revised the unit in 1972.[8] Spencer G. Lucas and S.N. Hayden did the same thing in 1989.[9] The Rock Point Member was assigned by R.F. Dubiel in 1989.[10]

The Chinle was raised to group rank by Lucas in 1993,[11] thus also raising many of the members to formation status. He also included the formations of the Dockum Group of eastern New Mexico and west Texas within the "Chinle Group".[12] This modified nomenclature is controversial; many still retain the Chinle as a formation and separate out the Dockum Group.[13][14] The Dockum was named in 1890, before the Chinle. Lucas also advocated abandoning the name Dolores Formation as a parochial synonym for the Chinle Group.

Overviews of the Chinle were created by Dubiel and others (1992) and Hintze and Axen (1995).[15]

Paleobiota edit

The Chinle Formation is fossiliferous, with a diverse array of extinct reptile, fish, and plant fossils, including early dinosaurs and the famous petrified wood of Petrified Forest National Park in Arizona.

Stratigraphy edit

The formation members and their thicknesses are highly variable across the Chinle.

Regional stratigraphic subunits of the Chinle Formation
Arizona and western New Mexico North-central New Mexico Monument Valley and southern Utah Colorado and northeast Utah
Rock Point Member "siltstone member" (in part) Church Rock Member "upper member"

"red siltstone member"

"sandstone and conglomerate member" (UT)

"ocher siltstone member" (UT)

Owl Rock Member "siltstone member" (in part)? Owl Rock Member

Kane Springs beds (in part)

Petrified Forest Member sensu stricto / "Upper Petrified Forest" / Painted Desert Member Petrified Forest Member Petrified Forest Member

Kane Springs beds (in part)

Sonsela Member Poleo Formation Moss Back Member
Blue Mesa Member / "Lower Petrified Forest"

Bluewater Creek Formation (NM)

Salitral Formation Monitor Butte Member

Cameron Member

"mottled member"

Gartra Member?

Mesa Redondo Member

Shinarump Conglomerate

Zuni Mountains Formation (NM)

Agua Zarca Sandstone / Shinarump Conglomerate

"mottled strata"

Shinarump Conglomerate

Temple Mountain Member

Arizona and western New Mexico edit

 
Fossil wood from Chinle Formation exposures at Petrified Forest National Park

Some of the most extensive deposits of the Chinle Formation are found in the southern Colorado Plateau, including Arizona and the western portion of New Mexico. In this region, the oldest and stratigraphically lowest portion of the Chinle is the Shinarump Conglomerate. The Shinarump includes braided-river system channel-deposit facies.[10] The Shinarump interfingers with a finer-grained subunit, the Mesa Redondo Member,[16] one of the oldest widespread units in the badlands of the Painted Desert area. In western New Mexico (particularly the Zuni Mountains area), the Mesa Redondo Member may be replaced by another sandy unit known as the Zuni Mountains Formation. Sediments from this time interval are followed by a geological unit called the Bluewater Creek Formation.[9]

 
Petrified Forest National Park araucarioxylon fossil wood weathered from the Chinle Formation

Most Chinle outcrops in the Painted Desert have traditionally been placed within the following Petrified Forest Member, a segment of Triassic sediments which are so diverse and extensive that it is sometimes raised to its own formation, subdivided further, or redefined more narrowly. In its widest definition, the Petrified Forest Member (or Formation) is split into three sections: the muddy Lower Petrified Forest and Upper Petrified Forest, and the sandy Sonsela Sandstone bed, which separates them. The Lower "Petrified Forest Member" is generally known as the Blue Mesa Member.[17] In Petrified Forest National Park (PEFO) and its vicinities, the Sonsela Sandstone is thick enough that it can be resolved into several distinct sandstone-rich layers. It is renamed as the Sonsela Member in this situation.[17] The Sonsela Sandstone is a collection of braided-stream channel facies.[18] The Upper "Petrified Forest Member" is sometimes called the Painted Desert Member,[19] or simply referred to as the Petrified Forest Member in a more restricted definition of the term.[17] The Petrified Forest is predominately overbank deposits with thin lenses of channel-deposit facies and lacustrine deposits.

The Petrified Forest Member grades into the Owl Rock Member, a marginal lacustrine to lacustrine facies possibly representing a large lake system. The Owl Rock Member is followed by the youngest and sandiest subunit of the Chinle, the Rock Point Member. The Rock Point is distinct enough that it was previously considered a unit of the Wingate Sandstone, a latest Triassic - early Jurassic aeolian formation which overlies the Chinle in many areas.[7]

Central New Mexico edit

 
The Whitaker ("Coelophysis") Quarry at Ghost Ranch, preserving the "siltstone member" of the Chinle Formation

Unambiguous exposures of the Chinle Formation extend into central New Mexico, beyond the eastern edge of the Colorado Plateau. Most of these are found in the Chama Basin of north-central New Mexico, particularly several famed paleontological sites at Ghost Ranch near Abiquiu. Minor exposures also occur in the Lucero Uplift west of Albuquerque, as well as other areas along the Rio Grande Rift.[20][21][7]

 
Stratigraphic column (A) and outcrop photos (C) of the Hayden Quarry fossil locality at Ghost Ranch, NM, alongside a map of Chinle exposures in NM (B)

As in the Colorado Plateau, the lowest major unit in north-central New Mexico is a sandstone-rich member. This layer, the Agua Zarca Sandstone,[3] is often synonymized with the Shinarump Conglomerate,[22][21][19] though it may be derived from a different erosional source.[14] It is often preceded by a very thin layer of silty mottled strata. This mottled strata is sometimes termed the Zuni Mountains Formation,[22][19] though the application of this term beyond the Zuni Mountains is questionable.[21][14] In the Chama Basin at least, the mottled strata is derived from the eroded and pedogenically modified surface of the Moenkopi Formation.[14]

The coarse lower unit grades into the fine-grained Salitral Formation, which is equivalent to the Blue Mesa Member and Bluewater Creek Formation. In south-central New Mexico, it may instead grade into the San Pedro Arroyo Formation, a similar heterolithic unit.[20] Coarse sandstone returns along a sharp contact with the following Poleo Formation, an equivalent of the Sonsela Member.[21] The Poleo Formation grades into the thick colorful sediments of the Petrified Forest Member. Authors which raise this member to a formation subdivide it into the lower Mesa Montosa Member and the upper Painted Desert Member.[22][21] The Petrified Forest Member is fossiliferous in the Chama Basin, with major sites including the Hayden, Canjilon, and Snyder quarries of Ghost Ranch.[23]

The stratigraphically highest unit in north-central New Mexico is the informally-named “siltstone member”. This unit is best exposed at Ghost Ranch, where it has produced the famous Whitaker Quarry, also known as the Coelophysis quarry due to a high concentration of fossils belonging to the theropod dinosaur Coelophysis bauri. The "siltstone member" may be equivalent to the Rock Point Member, and some authors refer to it as such.[22][21][19]

Monument Valley and southern Utah edit

 
The Shinarump Conglomerate (top, horizontal layers) as an erosion-resistant cap rock in Monument Valley
 
Permian through Jurassic stratigraphy of Glen Canyon National Recreation Area in Utah.
From top to bottom: (youngest to oldest)
5 – Rounded tan domes of the Navajo Sandstone,
4 – layered red Kayenta Formation,
3 – cliff-forming, vertically jointed, red Wingate Sandstone,
2 – slope-forming, purplish Chinle Formation, layered, lighter-red Moenkopi Formation
1 – white, layered Cutler Formation sandstone.
Picture from Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, Utah

The Chinle continues northwards into southern Utah and the Four Corners area, though it thins greatly to the northwest. A narrow band of undifferentiated purplish sediments from the lower part of the formation extend into vicinity of St. George. The formation thickens eastward into Zion National Park and Grand Staircase–Escalante National Monument. The Chinle is a prominent component of badlands and outcrops in the various national parks, monuments, and recreation areas of southeast Utah, extending in a discontinuous patchwork up to the San Rafael Swell.[24][25] The stratigraphic nomenclature used in southern Utah is also utilized in Monument Valley, where the coarse-grained lower members of the Chinle form a caprock for many famous buttes which characterize the valley.[7]

In this region, the stratigraphically lowest unit in the Chinle is usually the Shinarump Conglomerate (or Shinarump Member), which thins northward but is a reliable component of outcrops throughout the region. In several areas, a thin layer of mottled paleosols, the Temple Mountain Member, may be superimposed onto the Shinarump and underlying Moenkopi Formation.[26][25][27]

The Monitor Butte Member overlies the Shinarump and Temple Mountain members in southeast Utah and Monument Valley. This unit comprises drab and generally fine-grained sediments, equivalent to the Blue Mesa Member and Bluewater Creek Formation found further south.[25] The facies of this interval have been interpreted as overbank (distal floodplain) and lacustrine deposits. At Zion National Park, the Monitor Butte Member is replaced by a thick time-equivalent unit, the Cameron Member, which is also found in the Navajo Nation near its namesake of Cameron, Arizona. The Cameron Member is practically identical to the Blue Mesa Member, and likely represents the same depositional environment along the ancient river system responsible for the Chinle Formation. It is also distinct from the Monitor Butte Member, which has more evaporite deposits and fewer red sandy layers.[11][25]

The drab mudstone of the Monitor Butte and Cameron members are succeeded in a few areas by a thin section of massive conglomeratic sandstone, the Moss Back Member. This member represents sandy river channel deposits and is likely equivalent to part of the Sonsela Member.[25] Elsewhere, the Monitor Butte grades into the Petrified Forest Member, which in Utah includes the thin but geographically extensive Correo Sandstone Bed. The Petrified Forest Member is followed by the Owl Rock Member.[25][9] A unit of drab interbedded coarse and fine sediments, the Kane Springs beds, develops in the Paradox Basin. The Kane Springs beds are river deposits which are likely equivalent to the Owl Rock Member and the upper part of the Petrified Forest Member.[25] Finally, either the Rock Point Member or Church Rock Member overlie the Owl Rock. Some researchers feel that the Church Rock and Rock Point members may be synonymous.[28] They are complex heterolithic units, representing variously braided-river facies, lacustrine, and overbank deposits.

Chronology edit

Tetrapod biostratigraphy edit

The Chinle Formation is entirely Late Triassic in age. Tetrapod biostratigraphy for the Chinle was first developed based on phytosaurs and aetosaurs, which in 1998 were combined into global biozones in Spencer G. Lucas's Land Vertebrate Faunachrons system.[29] Simplified stratigraphy based on Litwin.[30] Note that age inferences devised by Lucas do not necessarily align with other chronological methods used in the Chinle Formation. Other works on Chinle biostratigraphy, such as Martz & Parker (2017),[31] are better integrated with magnetostratigraphy and radiometric dating, and are considered more accurate.

Faunachron name Distinguishing taxa Estimated age according to radiometric dating and magnetostratigraphy Inferred age based on Lucas's global tetrapod correlations Representative Chinle Member(s)
Apachean Redondasaurus Rhaetian (207-202 Ma) late Norian - Rhaetian
Revueltian Typothorax coccinarum,

Machaeroprosopus

middle to late Norian (Alaunian to Sevatian, 215-207 Ma) early to middle Norian
Adamanian Basal leptosuchomorph phytosaurs

(Smilosuchus, Leptosuchus, etc.)

early to middle Norian (Lacian to early Alaunian, 224-215 Ma) upper Late Carnian
Otischalkian Basal phytosaurs

(Paleorhinus / Parasuchus)

earliest Norian (earliest Lacian, 227-224 Ma) lower Late Carnian

Radiometric dating edit

Since 2011, widespread radiometric dating has helped to refine precise age data for part of the Chinle Formation, particularly in areas with a more complete stratigraphic record such as Petrified Forest National Park (PEFO). Volcanism further southwest along the Cordilleran magmatic arc supplies zircon crystals to the Chinle system, allowing for U-Pb dating of layers which host zircon grains. Eroded sediments from the Ancestral Rocky Mountains, Ouachita Mountains and Mogollon Highlands also supply older reworked zircon to the basin.[32]

Chinle radiometric dating is complicated by lithological quirks of zircon deposition. Taken at face value, U-Pb dates from coarse-grained layers are often several million years older than expected based on magnetostratigraphy, while mud-dominated layers are generally more accurate despite a lower sample size. This is likely because sandy rivers receive a higher proportion of recycled zircon grains from distant eroded rocks, while muddy plains are supplied with fresh zircon-rich ash from contemporary volcanic eruptions. While zircons from sandstone-rich layers are less useful for inferring direct depositional ages, they can be very useful for inferring sediment sources: each igneous or metamorphic sediment source has its own set of old (usually Precambrian) zircon ages, which can be traced in Triassic sediments.[32]

Outcrops of the Mesa Redondo Member at PEFO have been dated to ~225 Ma (2011)[33] or ~228 Ma (2013),[34] though these may be influenced by recycled grains.[32] Later estimates from a major core drilling project support a more recent depositional age of 223-222 Ma (2020).[35][32] This firmly suggests that practically all of the Chinle Formation was deposited in the Norian stage; According to the consensus "long Norian" hypothesis and radiometric assessments of marine strata, the Carnian-Norian boundary is tentatively set to ~227 Ma.[36]

At PEFO, U-Pb estimates from the Blue Mesa Member include 223 Ma (2011),[33] 222 Ma (2020),[35] and 221-218 Ma (2020).[32] Dated outcrops of drab mudstone near St. Johns, Arizona fit this general time period as well. The fossiliferous Placerias quarry, previously regarded as belonging to an older subunit, is likely part of the Blue Mesa Member based on an age date of 219.4 Ma (2014).[37] At Six Mile Canyon near Fort Wingate, New Mexico, the base of the Blue Mesa Member (or its local equivalent) is defined by a distinct sandstone bed, which has been dated to 221-219 Ma (2009)[38] or 218 Ma (2011).[39] The underlying Bluewater Creek Formation has also been dated to 221-219 Ma (2014), suggesting that it overlaps in time with the Arizonan Blue Mesa Member and possibly part of the Sonsela Member.[37]

Radiometric dates are well-recorded for the Sonsela Member, though a high concentration of reworked zircons must be accounted for when inferring an accurate age of deposition. The true duration of the Sonsela Member is likely from around 218 Ma to 213 Ma (2020),[35][32] though older estimates place its base at 220-219 Ma (2011, 2013).[33][34] A prominent biological turnover is found at the Adamanian-Revueltian boundary in the middle of the Sonsela Member, around 214 Ma. It may correspond to a local extinction, or simply represents a time period which is truncated by slow deposition or a geological hiatus.[40][35] The thin Sonsela Sandstone bed, the namesake of its corresponding member, has been dated to 216.6 Ma (2019) at its type locality at Sonsela Buttes in Arizona.[41]

The first Chinle U-Pb age data to be published referred to the Black Forest Bed, a sandstone layer near the top of the Petrified Forest Member in PEFO. U-Pb estimates for this layer include ~213 Ma (2003 maximum),[42] ~211 Ma (2009),[38] and ~210 Ma (2011, 2020).[33][35][32] A presumably older exposure of the Petrified Forest Member, the Hayden Quarry at Ghost Ranch, is dated to 212 Ma (2011).[39] A similar age was found for the middle part of the member in PEFO.[32] The end of the Petrified Forest Member was probably close to 208 Ma, meaning that overlying strata is presumably latest Norian-Rhaetian in age.[33][35]

Places found edit

 
Stratigraphy of Canyonlands N.P., with members of the Chinle Formation

Geologic Province:[1]

 
Glen Canyon Sandstone over Chinle Formation (Dinosaur National Monument, Utah)
Rock Point Member
Owl Rock Member
Petrified Forest Member
Mesa Redondo Member
Shinarump Member
Petrified Forest Member
Shinarump Member
upper member
red siltstone member (possibly correlative with Church Rock Member)
local sandstone and conglomerate member
ochre siltstone member
mottled member
Gartra Member
Redonda Formation
Bull Canyon Formation
Trujillo Formation
Garita Creek Formation
San Pedro Arroyo Formation
Shinarump Formation
Church Rock Member
Owl Rock Member
Petrified Forest Member
Moss Back Member
Monitor Butte Member
Shinarump Conglomerate
upper member
red siltstone member (possibly correlative with Church Rock Member)
local sandstone and conglomerate member
ochre siltstone member
mottled member
Gartra Member
Rock Point Member
Owl Rock Member
Petrified Forest Member
Mesa Redondo Member
Shinarump Member
Rock Point Formation
Owl Rock Formation
Petrified Forest Formation
Bluewater Creek/San Pedro Arroyo Formations
Shinarump Conglomerate/Zuni Mountains Formation
Stanaker Member
Gartra Member
Stanaker Member
Gartra Member
  • Wasatch Uplift*[7]

Parklands:

Other:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b GEOLEX database entry for Chinle, USGS (viewed 19 March 2006)
  2. ^ Gregory, Herbert E. (1917). Geology of the Navajo country - A reconnaissance of parts of Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah (PDF). United States Geological Survey Professional Papers #93. 161 p.
  3. ^ a b Wood, G.H.; Northrop, S.A. (1946). "Geology of the Nacimiento Mountains, San Pedro Mountain, and adjacent plateaus in parts of Sandoval and Rio Arriba Counties, New Mexico". USGS Oil and Gas Investigations. OM-57. doi:10.3133/om57.
  4. ^ Poole, F. G.; Stewart, J. H. (1964). "Chinle Formation and Glen Canyon Sandstone in Northeast Utah and Northwest Colorado". U.S. Geol. Survey Prof. Paper. Geological Survey Research 1964. 501-D: 93–104.
  5. ^ a b c Sikitch, Steve W. (1965). "Upper Triassic stratigraphy in the eastern Uinta Mountains". The Mountain Geologist. 2 (3): 167–172.
  6. ^ Wilson, Richard F.; Stewart, John H. (1967). "Correlation of Upper Triassic and Triassic Formations between southwestern Utah and southern Nevada". U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin. 1244-D: D1–D20. doi:10.3133/b1244D.
  7. ^ a b c d e Stewart, J.H.; Poole, F.G.; Wilson, R.F. (1972). "Stratigraphy and origin of the Chinle Formation and related Upper Triassic strata in the Colorado Plateau region, with sections on sedimentary petrology by R.A. Cadigan and conglomerate studies by William Thordarson and H.F. Albee" (PDF). U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper. 690. doi:10.3133/pp690.
  8. ^ Kelley, V.C. (1972). "Geology of the Fort Sumner sheet, New Mexico" (PDF). New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources Bulletin. 98.
  9. ^ a b c Lucas, S.G.; Hayden, S.N. (1989). "Triassic stratigraphy of west-central New Mexico" (PDF). New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Guidebook. 40: 191–211.
  10. ^ a b Dubiel, R.F. (1989). "Depositional and climatic setting of the Upper Triassic Chinle Formation, Colorado Plateau". In Lucas, S.G.; Hunt, A.P. (eds.). Dawn of the Age of Dinosaurs in the American Southwest. New Mexico Museum of Natural History. pp. 171–187.
  11. ^ a b Lucas, S.G. (1993). "The Chinle Group: revised stratigraphy and biochronology of Upper Triassic Nonmarine strata in the western United States". Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin. 59: 27–50.
  12. ^ a b Lucas, S.G.; Hunt, A.P.; Huber, P. (1990). "Triassic stratigraphy in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, New Mexico" (PDF). New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Guidebook. 41: 305–318.
  13. ^ a b Lehman, T.M. (1994). "The saga of the Dockum Group and the case of the Texas/New Mexico boundary fault" (PDF). New Mexico Bureau of Mines & Mineral Resources Bulletin. 150: 37–51.
  14. ^ a b c d e Cather, S.M.; Zeiger, Kate E.; Mack, Greg H.; Kelley, Shari A. (2013). "Toward standardization of Phanerozoic stratigraphic nomenclature in New Mexico". Rocky Mountain Geology. 48 (2): 101-124. Bibcode:2013RMGeo..48..101C. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.667.3513. doi:10.2113/gsrocky.48.2.101. S2CID 130158845.
  15. ^ GEOLEX database bibliographic references for Chinle (viewed 19 March 2006)
  16. ^ a b c Repenning, C.A.; Cooley, M.E.; Akers, J.P. (1969). "Stratigraphy of the Chinle and Moenkopi Formations, Navajo and Hopi Indian Reservations, Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah". U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper. Professional Paper. 521-B: B1–B34. doi:10.3133/pp521B.
  17. ^ a b c Woody, Daniel T. (2006). "Revised stratigraphy of the Lower Chinle Formation (Upper Triassic) of Petrified Forest National Park, Arizona" (PDF). In Parker, W.G.; Ash, S.R.; Irmis, R.B. (eds.). A century of research at Petrified Forest National Park : geology and paleontology. Museum of Northern Arizona. ISBN 0-89734-120-1. OCLC 71015548.
  18. ^ Martz, Jeffrey W.; Parker, William G. (19 February 2010). "Revised Lithostratigraphy of the Sonsela Member (Chinle Formation, Upper Triassic) in the Southern Part of Petrified Forest National Park, Arizona". PLOS ONE. 5 (2): e9329. Bibcode:2010PLoSO...5.9329M. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0009329. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 2824835. PMID 20174475.
  19. ^ a b c d Lucas, Spencer G. (2020). "Triassic stratigraphy of the southeastern Colorado Plateau, west-central New Mexico" (PDF). New Mexico Geological Society Special Publication. 14: 123–133.
  20. ^ a b c Lucas, S.G. (1991). "Triassic stratigraphy, paleontology and correlation, south-central New Mexico" (PDF). New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Guidebook. 42: 243–253.
  21. ^ a b c d e f Zeigler, Kate E.; Kelley, Shari; Geissman, John W. (1 January 2008). "Revisions to stratigraphic nomenclature of the Upper Triassic Chinle Group in New Mexico : New insights from geologic mapping, sedimentology, and magnetostratigraphic/paleomagnetic data". Rocky Mountain Geology. 43 (2): 121–141. Bibcode:2008RMGeo..43..121Z. doi:10.2113/gsrocky.43.2.121. ISSN 1555-7332.
  22. ^ a b c d Lucas, Spencer G.; Zeigler, Kate E.; Heckert, Andrew B.; Hunt, Adrian P. (2005). "Review of Upper Triassic stratigraphy and biostratigraphy in the Chama Basin, northern New Mexico" (PDF). New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Series. 56: 170–181.
  23. ^ Irmis, Randall B.; Nesbitt, Sterling J.; Padian, Kevin; Smith, Nathan D.; Turner, Alan H.; Woody, Daniel; Downs, Alex (20 July 2007). "A Late Triassic Dinosauromorph Assemblage from New Mexico and the Rise of Dinosaurs". Science. 317 (5836): 358–361. Bibcode:2007Sci...317..358I. doi:10.1126/science.1143325. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 17641198. S2CID 6050601.
  24. ^ a b Dubiel, R.F. (1987). "Sedimentology and new fossil occurrences of the Upper Triassic Chinle Formation, southeastern Utah". Four Corners Geological Society Field Conference Guidebook. 10: 99–107.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g Martz, Jeffrey; Kirkland, James; Milner, Andrew; Parker, William; Santucci, Vincent (21 April 2017). "Upper Triassic lithostratigraphy, depositional systems, and vertebrate paleontology across southern Utah". Geology of the Intermountain West. 4: 99–180. doi:10.31711/giw.v4.pp99-180. ISSN 2380-7601.
  26. ^ O'Sullivan, R.B.; MacLachlan, M.E. (1975). "Triassic rocks of the Moab-White Canyon area, southeastern Utah". Four Corners Geological Society Field Conference Guidebook, 8th Field Conference (8): 129–141.
  27. ^ "Shinarump Member of Chinle Formation". Colorado River Basin Stratigraphy. USGS. 6 May 2006. Retrieved 10 January 2011.
  28. ^ Milner, A.R. (2006). "Plant fossils from the Owl Rock or Church Rock Members, Chinle Formation, San Juan County, Utah". New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin. 37: 410–413.
  29. ^ Lucas, Spencer G (1 November 1998). "Global Triassic tetrapod biostratigraphy and biochronology". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 143 (4): 347–384. Bibcode:1998PPP...143..347L. doi:10.1016/S0031-0182(98)00117-5. ISSN 0031-0182.
  30. ^ Litwin, R.J., Traverse, A., and Ash, S.R., 1991. Preliminary palynological zonation of the Chinle Formation, southwestern U.S.A., and its correlation to the Newark Supergroup (eastern U.S.A.). Review of Paleobotany and Palynology, v. 77, pp. 269–287.
  31. ^ Martz, J. W.; Parker, W. G. (1 January 2017), Zeigler, Kate E.; Parker, William G. (eds.), "Revised Formulation of the Late Triassic Land Vertebrate "Faunachrons" of Western North America: Recommendations for Codifying Nascent Systems of Vertebrate Biochronology", Terrestrial Depositional Systems, Elsevier, pp. 39–125, ISBN 978-0-12-803243-5
  32. ^ a b c d e f g h Gehrels, George; Giesler, Dominique; Olsen, Paul; Kent, Dennis; Marsh, Adam; Parker, William; Rasmussen, Cornelia; Mundil, Roland; Irmis, Randall; Geissman, John; Lepre, Christopher (23 September 2020). "LA-ICPMS U–Pb geochronology of detrital zircon grains from the Coconino, Moenkopi, and Chinle formations in the Petrified Forest National Park (Arizona)". Geochronology. 2 (2): 257–282. Bibcode:2020GeChr...2..257G. doi:10.5194/gchron-2-257-2020. S2CID 236890628.
  33. ^ a b c d e Ramezani, Jahandar; Hoke, Gregory D.; Fastovsky, David E.; Bowring, Samuel A.; Therrien, François; Dworkin, Steven I.; Atchley, Stacy C.; Nordt, Lee C. (1 November 2011). "High-precision U-Pb zircon geochronology of the Late Triassic Chinle Formation, Petrified Forest National Park (Arizona, USA): Temporal constraints on the early evolution of dinosaurs". GSA Bulletin. 123 (11–12): 2142–2159. Bibcode:2011GSAB..123.2142R. doi:10.1130/B30433.1. ISSN 0016-7606.
  34. ^ a b Atchley, Stacy C.; Nordt, Lee C.; Dworkin, Stephen I.; Ramezani, Jahandar; Parker, William G.; Ash, Sidney R.; Bowring, Samuel A. (1 December 2013). "A Linkage Among Pangean Tectonism, Cyclic Alluviation, Climate Change, and Biologic Turnover in the Late Triassic: The Record From The Chinle Formation, Southwestern United States". Journal of Sedimentary Research. 83 (12): 1147–1161. doi:10.2110/jsr.2013.89. ISSN 1527-1404.
  35. ^ a b c d e f Rasmussen, Cornelia; Mundil, Roland; Irmis, Randall B.; Geisler, Dominique; Gehrels, George E.; Olsen, Paul E.; Kent, Dennis V.; Lepre, Christopher; Kinney, Sean T.; Geissman, John W.; Parker, William G. (20 July 2020). "U-Pb zircon geochronology and depositional age models for the Upper Triassic Chinle Formation (Petrified Forest National Park, Arizona, USA): Implications for Late Triassic paleoecological and paleoenvironmental change". GSA Bulletin. 133 (3–4): 539–558. doi:10.1130/B35485.1. ISSN 0016-7606.
  36. ^ Ogg, James G.; Huang, Chunju; Hinnov, Linda (May 2014). "Triassic timescale status: a brief overview" (PDF). Albertiana. 41: 3–30.
  37. ^ a b Ramezani, Jahandar; Fastovsky, David E.; Bowring, Samuel A. (1 June 2014). "Revised chronostratigraphy of the Lower Chinle Formation strata in Arizona and New Mexico (USA): High-precision U-Pb geochronological constraints on the Late Triassic evolution of dinosaurs". American Journal of Science. 314 (6): 981–1008. Bibcode:2014AmJS..314..981R. doi:10.2475/06.2014.01. ISSN 0002-9599. S2CID 129675146.
  38. ^ a b Heckert, A.B.; Lucas, S.G.; Dickinson, W.R.; Mortensen, J.K. (2009). "New ID-TIMS U-Pb ages for Chinle Group strata (Upper Triassic) in New Mexico and Arizona, correlation to the Newark Supergroup, and Implications for the "long Norian"". Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs. 41 (7): 123.
  39. ^ a b Irmis, Randall B.; Mundil, Roland; Martz, Jeffrey W.; Parker, William G. (15 September 2011). "High-resolution U–Pb ages from the Upper Triassic Chinle Formation (New Mexico, USA) support a diachronous rise of dinosaurs". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 309 (3): 258–267. Bibcode:2011E&PSL.309..258I. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2011.07.015. ISSN 0012-821X.
  40. ^ Nordt, Lee; Atchley, Stacy; Dworkin, Steve (1 November 2015). "Collapse of the Late Triassic megamonsoon in western equatorial Pangea, present-day American Southwest". GSA Bulletin. 127 (11–12): 1798–1815. Bibcode:2015GSAB..127.1798N. doi:10.1130/B31186.1. ISSN 0016-7606.
  41. ^ Marsh, Adam D.; Parker, William G.; Stockli, Daniel F.; Martz, Jeffrey W. (8 May 2019). "Regional correlation of the Sonsela Member (Upper Triassic Chinle Formation) and detrital U-Pb zircon data from the Sonsela Sandstone bed near the Sonsela Buttes, northeastern Arizona, USA, support the presence of a distributive fluvial system". Geosphere. 15 (4): 1128–1139. Bibcode:2019Geosp..15.1128M. doi:10.1130/GES02004.1. ISSN 1553-040X. S2CID 164325311.
  42. ^ Riggs, N.R.; Ash, S.R.; Barth, A.P.; Gehrels, G.E.; Wooden, J.L. (1 November 2003). "Isotopic age of the Black Forest Bed, Petrified Forest Member, Chinle Formation, Arizona: An example of dating a continental sandstone". GSA Bulletin. 115 (11): 1315–1323. Bibcode:2003GSAB..115.1315R. doi:10.1130/B25254.1. ISSN 0016-7606.
  43. ^ a b Dubiel, R.F. (1989). "Sedimentology and revised nomenclature of the Upper Triassic Chinle Formation and the Lower Jurassic Wingate Sandstone, northwestern New Mexico and northeastern Arizona" (PDF). New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Guidebook. 40: 213–223.
  44. ^ Hintze, L.F.; Axen, G.J. (1995). "Geologic map of the Scarecrow Peak Quadrangle, Washington County, Utah, and Lincoln County, Nevada". U.S. Geological Survey Geologic Quadrangle Map. GQ-1759.
  45. ^ a b Poole, F.G.; Stewart, J.H. (1964). "Chinle Formation and Glen Canyon Sandstone in northeastern Utah and northwestern Colorado". U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper. 501-D: D30–D39. doi:10.3133/pp501D.
  46. ^ a b c Barnes, V.E., ed. (1983). "Tucumcari sheet". Geologic atlas of Texas. University of Texas-Austin, Bureau of Economic Geology.
  47. ^ Lucas, Spencer G. (2021). "Triassic stratigraphy of the southeastern Colorado Plateau, west-central New Mexico" (PDF). New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Series. 72: 229–240.
  48. ^ . Archived from the original on 1 April 2009.

Further reading edit

  • Lucas, S.G. (1998). "Global Triassic tetrapod biostratigraphy and biochronology". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, and Palaeoecology, v. 143, pp. 347–384.

External links edit

  • Chinleana- "Chinle Confusion"

chinle, formation, upper, triassic, continental, geological, formation, fluvial, lacustrine, palustrine, eolian, deposits, spread, across, states, nevada, utah, northern, arizona, western, mexico, western, colorado, mexico, often, raised, status, geological, g. The Chinle Formation is an Upper Triassic continental geological formation of fluvial lacustrine and palustrine to eolian deposits spread across the U S states of Nevada Utah northern Arizona western New Mexico and western Colorado In New Mexico it is often raised to the status of a geological group the Chinle Group Some authors have controversially considered the Chinle to be synonymous to the Dockum Group of eastern Colorado and New Mexico western Texas the Oklahoma panhandle and southwestern Kansas The Chinle Formation is part of the Colorado Plateau Basin and Range and the southern section of the Interior Plains 1 A probable separate depositional basin within the Chinle is found in northwestern Colorado and northeastern Utah The southern portion of the Chinle reaches a maximum thickness of a little over 520 meters 1 710 ft Typically the Chinle rests unconformably on the Moenkopi Formation Chinle FormationStratigraphic range Norian Rhaetian PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NChinle Badlands Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument Utah US TypeGeological formationSub unitssee textUnderliesWingate Sandstone Moenave Formation Nugget SandstoneOverliesMoenkopi Formation or Cutler GroupLithologyPrimaryfluvial mudstone siltstone and sandstoneOtherpaleosolsLocationCoordinates36 09 18 N 109 34 44 W 36 155 N 109 579 W 36 155 109 579RegionColorado PlateauExtentUtah ColoradoNew MexicoArizonaNevadaType sectionNamed forChinle AZNamed byHerbert E GregoryChinle Formation the United States Show map of the United StatesChinle Formation Arizona Show map of ArizonaType locality in ArizonaThe Chinle Formation was probably mostly deposited in the Norian stage according to a plethora of chronological techniques It is a thick and fossiliferous formation with numerous named members subunits throughout its area of deposition Contents 1 History of investigation 2 Paleobiota 3 Stratigraphy 3 1 Arizona and western New Mexico 3 2 Central New Mexico 3 3 Monument Valley and southern Utah 4 Chronology 4 1 Tetrapod biostratigraphy 4 2 Radiometric dating 5 Places found 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory of investigation editWhile colorful Triassic sediments of the Colorado Plateau have been investigated since the 19th century the Chinle Formation was only formally named and described by Herbert E Gregory in 1917 It was named for Chinle Valley in Apache County Arizona land which is largely within the Navajo Nation Gregory did not designate a type locality He split the Chinle into four subunits labelled A youngest to D oldest This did not include the underlying Shinarump Conglomerate named by G K Gilbert and Edwin E Howell in 1875 which he considered a separate formation 2 United States Geological Survey geologists and paleontologists continued to map out the Chinle Formation through the 20th century revising the unnamed subunits of Gregory A basic stratigraphy of the formation was developed for north central New Mexico by Wood and Northrop 1946 3 and stratigraphy in the Four Corners Region was established by the late 1950s In 1956 Economic geologist Raymond C Robeck identified and named the Temple Mountain member as the basal most unit in the area of the San Rafael Swell of Utah In 1957 John H Stewart revised the Shinarump Conglomerate and renamed it the Shinarump member of the Chinle formation Study of the formation expanded northwards into northern Utah and Colorado facilitated through papers by Forrest G Poole and Stewart 1964 4 and Steve W Sikich 1965 5 who named informal local members equivalent to those of Arizona and New Mexico The complete areal extent of the unit was mapped by R F Wilson and Stewart in 1967 6 Stewart and his colleagues created an expansive overview and revision of the formation in 1972 summarizing previous knowledge on Chinle stratigraphy 7 V C Kelley assigned more members and revised the unit in 1972 8 Spencer G Lucas and S N Hayden did the same thing in 1989 9 The Rock Point Member was assigned by R F Dubiel in 1989 10 The Chinle was raised to group rank by Lucas in 1993 11 thus also raising many of the members to formation status He also included the formations of the Dockum Group of eastern New Mexico and west Texas within the Chinle Group 12 This modified nomenclature is controversial many still retain the Chinle as a formation and separate out the Dockum Group 13 14 The Dockum was named in 1890 before the Chinle Lucas also advocated abandoning the name Dolores Formation as a parochial synonym for the Chinle Group Overviews of the Chinle were created by Dubiel and others 1992 and Hintze and Axen 1995 15 Paleobiota editMain articles Paleobiota of the Chinle Formation and List of archosaurs of the Chinle Formation The Chinle Formation is fossiliferous with a diverse array of extinct reptile fish and plant fossils including early dinosaurs and the famous petrified wood of Petrified Forest National Park in Arizona Stratigraphy editThe formation members and their thicknesses are highly variable across the Chinle Regional stratigraphic subunits of the Chinle Formation Arizona and western New Mexico North central New Mexico Monument Valley and southern Utah Colorado and northeast UtahRock Point Member siltstone member in part Church Rock Member upper member red siltstone member sandstone and conglomerate member UT ocher siltstone member UT Owl Rock Member siltstone member in part Owl Rock Member Kane Springs beds in part Petrified Forest Member sensu stricto Upper Petrified Forest Painted Desert Member Petrified Forest Member Petrified Forest Member Kane Springs beds in part Sonsela Member Poleo Formation Moss Back MemberBlue Mesa Member Lower Petrified Forest Bluewater Creek Formation NM Salitral Formation Monitor Butte Member Cameron Member mottled member Gartra Member Mesa Redondo Member Shinarump ConglomerateZuni Mountains Formation NM Agua Zarca Sandstone Shinarump Conglomerate mottled strata Shinarump Conglomerate Temple Mountain MemberArizona and western New Mexico edit nbsp Fossil wood from Chinle Formation exposures at Petrified Forest National ParkSome of the most extensive deposits of the Chinle Formation are found in the southern Colorado Plateau including Arizona and the western portion of New Mexico In this region the oldest and stratigraphically lowest portion of the Chinle is the Shinarump Conglomerate The Shinarump includes braided river system channel deposit facies 10 The Shinarump interfingers with a finer grained subunit the Mesa Redondo Member 16 one of the oldest widespread units in the badlands of the Painted Desert area In western New Mexico particularly the Zuni Mountains area the Mesa Redondo Member may be replaced by another sandy unit known as the Zuni Mountains Formation Sediments from this time interval are followed by a geological unit called the Bluewater Creek Formation 9 nbsp Petrified Forest National Park araucarioxylon fossil wood weathered from the Chinle FormationMost Chinle outcrops in the Painted Desert have traditionally been placed within the following Petrified Forest Member a segment of Triassic sediments which are so diverse and extensive that it is sometimes raised to its own formation subdivided further or redefined more narrowly In its widest definition the Petrified Forest Member or Formation is split into three sections the muddy Lower Petrified Forest and Upper Petrified Forest and the sandy Sonsela Sandstone bed which separates them The Lower Petrified Forest Member is generally known as the Blue Mesa Member 17 In Petrified Forest National Park PEFO and its vicinities the Sonsela Sandstone is thick enough that it can be resolved into several distinct sandstone rich layers It is renamed as the Sonsela Member in this situation 17 The Sonsela Sandstone is a collection of braided stream channel facies 18 The Upper Petrified Forest Member is sometimes called the Painted Desert Member 19 or simply referred to as the Petrified Forest Member in a more restricted definition of the term 17 The Petrified Forest is predominately overbank deposits with thin lenses of channel deposit facies and lacustrine deposits The Petrified Forest Member grades into the Owl Rock Member a marginal lacustrine to lacustrine facies possibly representing a large lake system The Owl Rock Member is followed by the youngest and sandiest subunit of the Chinle the Rock Point Member The Rock Point is distinct enough that it was previously considered a unit of the Wingate Sandstone a latest Triassic early Jurassic aeolian formation which overlies the Chinle in many areas 7 Central New Mexico edit nbsp The Whitaker Coelophysis Quarry at Ghost Ranch preserving the siltstone member of the Chinle FormationUnambiguous exposures of the Chinle Formation extend into central New Mexico beyond the eastern edge of the Colorado Plateau Most of these are found in the Chama Basin of north central New Mexico particularly several famed paleontological sites at Ghost Ranch near Abiquiu Minor exposures also occur in the Lucero Uplift west of Albuquerque as well as other areas along the Rio Grande Rift 20 21 7 nbsp Stratigraphic column A and outcrop photos C of the Hayden Quarry fossil locality at Ghost Ranch NM alongside a map of Chinle exposures in NM B As in the Colorado Plateau the lowest major unit in north central New Mexico is a sandstone rich member This layer the Agua Zarca Sandstone 3 is often synonymized with the Shinarump Conglomerate 22 21 19 though it may be derived from a different erosional source 14 It is often preceded by a very thin layer of silty mottled strata This mottled strata is sometimes termed the Zuni Mountains Formation 22 19 though the application of this term beyond the Zuni Mountains is questionable 21 14 In the Chama Basin at least the mottled strata is derived from the eroded and pedogenically modified surface of the Moenkopi Formation 14 The coarse lower unit grades into the fine grained Salitral Formation which is equivalent to the Blue Mesa Member and Bluewater Creek Formation In south central New Mexico it may instead grade into the San Pedro Arroyo Formation a similar heterolithic unit 20 Coarse sandstone returns along a sharp contact with the following Poleo Formation an equivalent of the Sonsela Member 21 The Poleo Formation grades into the thick colorful sediments of the Petrified Forest Member Authors which raise this member to a formation subdivide it into the lower Mesa Montosa Member and the upper Painted Desert Member 22 21 The Petrified Forest Member is fossiliferous in the Chama Basin with major sites including the Hayden Canjilon and Snyder quarries of Ghost Ranch 23 The stratigraphically highest unit in north central New Mexico is the informally named siltstone member This unit is best exposed at Ghost Ranch where it has produced the famous Whitaker Quarry also known as the Coelophysis quarry due to a high concentration of fossils belonging to the theropod dinosaur Coelophysis bauri The siltstone member may be equivalent to the Rock Point Member and some authors refer to it as such 22 21 19 Monument Valley and southern Utah edit nbsp The Shinarump Conglomerate top horizontal layers as an erosion resistant cap rock in Monument Valley nbsp Permian through Jurassic stratigraphy of Glen Canyon National Recreation Area in Utah From top to bottom youngest to oldest 5 Rounded tan domes of the Navajo Sandstone 4 layered red Kayenta Formation 3 cliff forming vertically jointed red Wingate Sandstone 2 slope forming purplish Chinle Formation layered lighter red Moenkopi Formation1 white layered Cutler Formation sandstone Picture from Glen Canyon National Recreation Area UtahThe Chinle continues northwards into southern Utah and the Four Corners area though it thins greatly to the northwest A narrow band of undifferentiated purplish sediments from the lower part of the formation extend into vicinity of St George The formation thickens eastward into Zion National Park and Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument The Chinle is a prominent component of badlands and outcrops in the various national parks monuments and recreation areas of southeast Utah extending in a discontinuous patchwork up to the San Rafael Swell 24 25 The stratigraphic nomenclature used in southern Utah is also utilized in Monument Valley where the coarse grained lower members of the Chinle form a caprock for many famous buttes which characterize the valley 7 In this region the stratigraphically lowest unit in the Chinle is usually the Shinarump Conglomerate or Shinarump Member which thins northward but is a reliable component of outcrops throughout the region In several areas a thin layer of mottled paleosols the Temple Mountain Member may be superimposed onto the Shinarump and underlying Moenkopi Formation 26 25 27 The Monitor Butte Member overlies the Shinarump and Temple Mountain members in southeast Utah and Monument Valley This unit comprises drab and generally fine grained sediments equivalent to the Blue Mesa Member and Bluewater Creek Formation found further south 25 The facies of this interval have been interpreted as overbank distal floodplain and lacustrine deposits At Zion National Park the Monitor Butte Member is replaced by a thick time equivalent unit the Cameron Member which is also found in the Navajo Nation near its namesake of Cameron Arizona The Cameron Member is practically identical to the Blue Mesa Member and likely represents the same depositional environment along the ancient river system responsible for the Chinle Formation It is also distinct from the Monitor Butte Member which has more evaporite deposits and fewer red sandy layers 11 25 The drab mudstone of the Monitor Butte and Cameron members are succeeded in a few areas by a thin section of massive conglomeratic sandstone the Moss Back Member This member represents sandy river channel deposits and is likely equivalent to part of the Sonsela Member 25 Elsewhere the Monitor Butte grades into the Petrified Forest Member which in Utah includes the thin but geographically extensive Correo Sandstone Bed The Petrified Forest Member is followed by the Owl Rock Member 25 9 A unit of drab interbedded coarse and fine sediments the Kane Springs beds develops in the Paradox Basin The Kane Springs beds are river deposits which are likely equivalent to the Owl Rock Member and the upper part of the Petrified Forest Member 25 Finally either the Rock Point Member or Church Rock Member overlie the Owl Rock Some researchers feel that the Church Rock and Rock Point members may be synonymous 28 They are complex heterolithic units representing variously braided river facies lacustrine and overbank deposits Chronology editTetrapod biostratigraphy edit Main article Triassic land vertebrate faunachrons The Chinle Formation is entirely Late Triassic in age Tetrapod biostratigraphy for the Chinle was first developed based on phytosaurs and aetosaurs which in 1998 were combined into global biozones in Spencer G Lucas s Land Vertebrate Faunachrons system 29 Simplified stratigraphy based on Litwin 30 Note that age inferences devised by Lucas do not necessarily align with other chronological methods used in the Chinle Formation Other works on Chinle biostratigraphy such as Martz amp Parker 2017 31 are better integrated with magnetostratigraphy and radiometric dating and are considered more accurate Faunachron name Distinguishing taxa Estimated age according to radiometric dating and magnetostratigraphy Inferred age based on Lucas s global tetrapod correlations Representative Chinle Member s Apachean Redondasaurus Rhaetian 207 202 Ma late Norian Rhaetian Rock Point Church Rock siltstone member Owl Rock in part Revueltian Typothorax coccinarum Machaeroprosopus middle to late Norian Alaunian to Sevatian 215 207 Ma early to middle Norian Owl Rock in part Kane Springs Beds Petrified Forest Upper Petrified Forest Painted Desert Sonsela in part Adamanian Basal leptosuchomorph phytosaurs Smilosuchus Leptosuchus etc early to middle Norian Lacian to early Alaunian 224 215 Ma upper Late Carnian Sonsela in part Blue Mesa Lower Petrified Forest Moss Back Monitor Butte Cameron in part Otischalkian Basal phytosaurs Paleorhinus Parasuchus earliest Norian earliest Lacian 227 224 Ma lower Late Carnian Cameron in part Mesa Redondo Shinarump Temple MountainRadiometric dating edit Since 2011 widespread radiometric dating has helped to refine precise age data for part of the Chinle Formation particularly in areas with a more complete stratigraphic record such as Petrified Forest National Park PEFO Volcanism further southwest along the Cordilleran magmatic arc supplies zircon crystals to the Chinle system allowing for U Pb dating of layers which host zircon grains Eroded sediments from the Ancestral Rocky Mountains Ouachita Mountains and Mogollon Highlands also supply older reworked zircon to the basin 32 Chinle radiometric dating is complicated by lithological quirks of zircon deposition Taken at face value U Pb dates from coarse grained layers are often several million years older than expected based on magnetostratigraphy while mud dominated layers are generally more accurate despite a lower sample size This is likely because sandy rivers receive a higher proportion of recycled zircon grains from distant eroded rocks while muddy plains are supplied with fresh zircon rich ash from contemporary volcanic eruptions While zircons from sandstone rich layers are less useful for inferring direct depositional ages they can be very useful for inferring sediment sources each igneous or metamorphic sediment source has its own set of old usually Precambrian zircon ages which can be traced in Triassic sediments 32 Outcrops of the Mesa Redondo Member at PEFO have been dated to 225 Ma 2011 33 or 228 Ma 2013 34 though these may be influenced by recycled grains 32 Later estimates from a major core drilling project support a more recent depositional age of 223 222 Ma 2020 35 32 This firmly suggests that practically all of the Chinle Formation was deposited in the Norian stage According to the consensus long Norian hypothesis and radiometric assessments of marine strata the Carnian Norian boundary is tentatively set to 227 Ma 36 At PEFO U Pb estimates from the Blue Mesa Member include 223 Ma 2011 33 222 Ma 2020 35 and 221 218 Ma 2020 32 Dated outcrops of drab mudstone near St Johns Arizona fit this general time period as well The fossiliferous Placerias quarry previously regarded as belonging to an older subunit is likely part of the Blue Mesa Member based on an age date of 219 4 Ma 2014 37 At Six Mile Canyon near Fort Wingate New Mexico the base of the Blue Mesa Member or its local equivalent is defined by a distinct sandstone bed which has been dated to 221 219 Ma 2009 38 or 218 Ma 2011 39 The underlying Bluewater Creek Formation has also been dated to 221 219 Ma 2014 suggesting that it overlaps in time with the Arizonan Blue Mesa Member and possibly part of the Sonsela Member 37 Radiometric dates are well recorded for the Sonsela Member though a high concentration of reworked zircons must be accounted for when inferring an accurate age of deposition The true duration of the Sonsela Member is likely from around 218 Ma to 213 Ma 2020 35 32 though older estimates place its base at 220 219 Ma 2011 2013 33 34 A prominent biological turnover is found at the Adamanian Revueltian boundary in the middle of the Sonsela Member around 214 Ma It may correspond to a local extinction or simply represents a time period which is truncated by slow deposition or a geological hiatus 40 35 The thin Sonsela Sandstone bed the namesake of its corresponding member has been dated to 216 6 Ma 2019 at its type locality at Sonsela Buttes in Arizona 41 The first Chinle U Pb age data to be published referred to the Black Forest Bed a sandstone layer near the top of the Petrified Forest Member in PEFO U Pb estimates for this layer include 213 Ma 2003 maximum 42 211 Ma 2009 38 and 210 Ma 2011 2020 33 35 32 A presumably older exposure of the Petrified Forest Member the Hayden Quarry at Ghost Ranch is dated to 212 Ma 2011 39 A similar age was found for the middle part of the member in PEFO 32 The end of the Petrified Forest Member was probably close to 208 Ma meaning that overlying strata is presumably latest Norian Rhaetian in age 33 35 Places found edit nbsp Stratigraphy of Canyonlands N P with members of the Chinle FormationGeologic Province 1 nbsp Glen Canyon Sandstone over Chinle Formation Dinosaur National Monument Utah Black Mesa Basin 43 16 Rock Point Member Owl Rock Member Petrified Forest Member Mesa Redondo Member Shinarump Member dd Great Basin province 44 Petrified Forest Member Shinarump Member dd Green River Basin 45 upper member red siltstone member possibly correlative with Church Rock Member local sandstone and conglomerate member ochre siltstone member mottled member Gartra Member dd Las Vegas Raton Basin 12 disputed 13 14 Redonda Formation Bull Canyon Formation Trujillo Formation Garita Creek Formation dd Orogrande Basin 20 San Pedro Arroyo Formation Shinarump Formation dd Palo Duro Basin undivided 46 Paradox Basin 24 Church Rock Member Owl Rock Member Petrified Forest Member Moss Back Member Monitor Butte Member Shinarump Conglomerate dd Permian Basin undivided 46 Piceance Basin 45 upper member red siltstone member possibly correlative with Church Rock Member local sandstone and conglomerate member ochre siltstone member mottled member Gartra Member dd Plateau Sedimentary Province 43 16 Rock Point Member Owl Rock Member Petrified Forest Member Mesa Redondo Member Shinarump Member dd San Juan Basin 47 Rock Point Formation Owl Rock Formation Petrified Forest Formation Bluewater Creek San Pedro Arroyo Formations Shinarump Conglomerate Zuni Mountains Formation dd Sierra Grande Uplift undivided 46 Uinta Basin 5 Stanaker Member Gartra Member dd Uinta Uplift 5 Stanaker Member Gartra Member dd Wasatch Uplift 7 Parklands Arches National Park Canyonlands National Park see geology of the Canyonlands area Capitol Reef National Park see geology of the Capitol Reef area Colorado National Monument Dinosaur National Monument Flaming Gorge National Recreation Area Glen Canyon National Recreation Area Gold Butte National Monument Grand Canyon National Park see geology of the Grand Canyon Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument Lake Mead National Recreation Area Natural Bridges National Monument Petrified Forest National Park Red Fleet State Park Wupatki National Monument Zion National Park see geology of the Zion and Kolob canyons area Red Rock Canyon National Conservation AreaOther Ghost Ranch 48 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chinle Formation List of dinosaur bearing rock formations Paleobiota of the Chinle Formation Triassic land vertebrate faunachronsReferences edit a b GEOLEX database entry for Chinle USGS viewed 19 March 2006 Gregory Herbert E 1917 Geology of the Navajo country A reconnaissance of parts of Arizona New Mexico and Utah PDF United States Geological Survey Professional Papers 93 161 p a b Wood G H Northrop S A 1946 Geology of the Nacimiento Mountains San Pedro Mountain and adjacent plateaus in parts of Sandoval and Rio Arriba Counties New Mexico USGS Oil and Gas Investigations OM 57 doi 10 3133 om57 Poole F G Stewart J H 1964 Chinle Formation and Glen Canyon Sandstone in Northeast Utah and Northwest Colorado U S Geol Survey Prof Paper Geological Survey Research 1964 501 D 93 104 a b c Sikitch Steve W 1965 Upper Triassic stratigraphy in the eastern Uinta Mountains The Mountain Geologist 2 3 167 172 Wilson Richard F Stewart John H 1967 Correlation of Upper Triassic and Triassic Formations between southwestern Utah and southern Nevada U S Geological Survey Bulletin 1244 D D1 D20 doi 10 3133 b1244D a b c d e Stewart J H Poole F G Wilson R F 1972 Stratigraphy and origin of the Chinle Formation and related Upper Triassic strata in the Colorado Plateau region with sections on sedimentary petrology by R A Cadigan and conglomerate studies by William Thordarson and H F Albee PDF U S Geological Survey Professional Paper 690 doi 10 3133 pp690 Kelley V C 1972 Geology of the Fort Sumner sheet New Mexico PDF New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources Bulletin 98 a b c Lucas S G Hayden S N 1989 Triassic stratigraphy of west central New Mexico PDF New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Guidebook 40 191 211 a b Dubiel R F 1989 Depositional and climatic setting of the Upper Triassic Chinle Formation Colorado Plateau In Lucas S G Hunt A P eds Dawn of the Age of Dinosaurs in the American Southwest New Mexico Museum of Natural History pp 171 187 a b Lucas S G 1993 The Chinle Group revised stratigraphy and biochronology of Upper Triassic Nonmarine strata in the western United States Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin 59 27 50 a b Lucas S G Hunt A P Huber P 1990 Triassic stratigraphy in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains New Mexico PDF New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Guidebook 41 305 318 a b Lehman T M 1994 The saga of the Dockum Group and the case of the Texas New Mexico boundary fault PDF New Mexico Bureau of Mines amp Mineral Resources Bulletin 150 37 51 a b c d e Cather S M Zeiger Kate E Mack Greg H Kelley Shari A 2013 Toward standardization of Phanerozoic stratigraphic nomenclature in New Mexico Rocky Mountain Geology 48 2 101 124 Bibcode 2013RMGeo 48 101C CiteSeerX 10 1 1 667 3513 doi 10 2113 gsrocky 48 2 101 S2CID 130158845 GEOLEX database bibliographic references for Chinle viewed 19 March 2006 a b c Repenning C A Cooley M E Akers J P 1969 Stratigraphy of the Chinle and Moenkopi Formations Navajo and Hopi Indian Reservations Arizona New Mexico and Utah U S Geological Survey Professional Paper Professional Paper 521 B B1 B34 doi 10 3133 pp521B a b c Woody Daniel T 2006 Revised stratigraphy of the Lower Chinle Formation Upper Triassic of Petrified Forest National Park Arizona PDF In Parker W G Ash S R Irmis R B eds A century of research at Petrified Forest National Park geology and paleontology Museum of Northern Arizona ISBN 0 89734 120 1 OCLC 71015548 Martz Jeffrey W Parker William G 19 February 2010 Revised Lithostratigraphy of the Sonsela Member Chinle Formation Upper Triassic in the Southern Part of Petrified Forest National Park Arizona PLOS ONE 5 2 e9329 Bibcode 2010PLoSO 5 9329M doi 10 1371 journal pone 0009329 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 2824835 PMID 20174475 a b c d Lucas Spencer G 2020 Triassic stratigraphy of the southeastern Colorado Plateau west central New Mexico PDF New Mexico Geological Society Special Publication 14 123 133 a b c Lucas S G 1991 Triassic stratigraphy paleontology and correlation south central New Mexico PDF New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Guidebook 42 243 253 a b c d e f Zeigler Kate E Kelley Shari Geissman John W 1 January 2008 Revisions to stratigraphic nomenclature of the Upper Triassic Chinle Group in New Mexico New insights from geologic mapping sedimentology and magnetostratigraphic paleomagnetic data Rocky Mountain Geology 43 2 121 141 Bibcode 2008RMGeo 43 121Z doi 10 2113 gsrocky 43 2 121 ISSN 1555 7332 a b c d Lucas Spencer G Zeigler Kate E Heckert Andrew B Hunt Adrian P 2005 Review of Upper Triassic stratigraphy and biostratigraphy in the Chama Basin northern New Mexico PDF New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Series 56 170 181 Irmis Randall B Nesbitt Sterling J Padian Kevin Smith Nathan D Turner Alan H Woody Daniel Downs Alex 20 July 2007 A Late Triassic Dinosauromorph Assemblage from New Mexico and the Rise of Dinosaurs Science 317 5836 358 361 Bibcode 2007Sci 317 358I doi 10 1126 science 1143325 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 17641198 S2CID 6050601 a b Dubiel R F 1987 Sedimentology and new fossil occurrences of the Upper Triassic Chinle Formation southeastern Utah Four Corners Geological Society Field Conference Guidebook 10 99 107 a b c d e f g Martz Jeffrey Kirkland James Milner Andrew Parker William Santucci Vincent 21 April 2017 Upper Triassic lithostratigraphy depositional systems and vertebrate paleontology across southern Utah Geology of the Intermountain West 4 99 180 doi 10 31711 giw v4 pp99 180 ISSN 2380 7601 O Sullivan R B MacLachlan M E 1975 Triassic rocks of the Moab White Canyon area southeastern Utah Four Corners Geological Society Field Conference Guidebook 8th Field Conference 8 129 141 Shinarump Member of Chinle Formation Colorado River Basin Stratigraphy USGS 6 May 2006 Retrieved 10 January 2011 Milner A R 2006 Plant fossils from the Owl Rock or Church Rock Members Chinle Formation San Juan County Utah New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 37 410 413 Lucas Spencer G 1 November 1998 Global Triassic tetrapod biostratigraphy and biochronology Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 143 4 347 384 Bibcode 1998PPP 143 347L doi 10 1016 S0031 0182 98 00117 5 ISSN 0031 0182 Litwin R J Traverse A and Ash S R 1991 Preliminary palynological zonation of the Chinle Formation southwestern U S A and its correlation to the Newark Supergroup eastern U S A Review of Paleobotany and Palynology v 77 pp 269 287 Martz J W Parker W G 1 January 2017 Zeigler Kate E Parker William G eds Revised Formulation of the Late Triassic Land Vertebrate Faunachrons of Western North America Recommendations for Codifying Nascent Systems of Vertebrate Biochronology Terrestrial Depositional Systems Elsevier pp 39 125 ISBN 978 0 12 803243 5 a b c d e f g h Gehrels George Giesler Dominique Olsen Paul Kent Dennis Marsh Adam Parker William Rasmussen Cornelia Mundil Roland Irmis Randall Geissman John Lepre Christopher 23 September 2020 LA ICPMS U Pb geochronology of detrital zircon grains from the Coconino Moenkopi and Chinle formations in the Petrified Forest National Park Arizona Geochronology 2 2 257 282 Bibcode 2020GeChr 2 257G doi 10 5194 gchron 2 257 2020 S2CID 236890628 a b c d e Ramezani Jahandar Hoke Gregory D Fastovsky David E Bowring Samuel A Therrien Francois Dworkin Steven I Atchley Stacy C Nordt Lee C 1 November 2011 High precision U Pb zircon geochronology of the Late Triassic Chinle Formation Petrified Forest National Park Arizona USA Temporal constraints on the early evolution of dinosaurs GSA Bulletin 123 11 12 2142 2159 Bibcode 2011GSAB 123 2142R doi 10 1130 B30433 1 ISSN 0016 7606 a b Atchley Stacy C Nordt Lee C Dworkin Stephen I Ramezani Jahandar Parker William G Ash Sidney R Bowring Samuel A 1 December 2013 A Linkage Among Pangean Tectonism Cyclic Alluviation Climate Change and Biologic Turnover in the Late Triassic The Record From The Chinle Formation Southwestern United States Journal of Sedimentary Research 83 12 1147 1161 doi 10 2110 jsr 2013 89 ISSN 1527 1404 a b c d e f Rasmussen Cornelia Mundil Roland Irmis Randall B Geisler Dominique Gehrels George E Olsen Paul E Kent Dennis V Lepre Christopher Kinney Sean T Geissman John W Parker William G 20 July 2020 U Pb zircon geochronology and depositional age models for the Upper Triassic Chinle Formation Petrified Forest National Park Arizona USA Implications for Late Triassic paleoecological and paleoenvironmental change GSA Bulletin 133 3 4 539 558 doi 10 1130 B35485 1 ISSN 0016 7606 Ogg James G Huang Chunju Hinnov Linda May 2014 Triassic timescale status a brief overview PDF Albertiana 41 3 30 a b Ramezani Jahandar Fastovsky David E Bowring Samuel A 1 June 2014 Revised chronostratigraphy of the Lower Chinle Formation strata in Arizona and New Mexico USA High precision U Pb geochronological constraints on the Late Triassic evolution of dinosaurs American Journal of Science 314 6 981 1008 Bibcode 2014AmJS 314 981R doi 10 2475 06 2014 01 ISSN 0002 9599 S2CID 129675146 a b Heckert A B Lucas S G Dickinson W R Mortensen J K 2009 New ID TIMS U Pb ages for Chinle Group strata Upper Triassic in New Mexico and Arizona correlation to the Newark Supergroup and Implications for the long Norian Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs 41 7 123 a b Irmis Randall B Mundil Roland Martz Jeffrey W Parker William G 15 September 2011 High resolution U Pb ages from the Upper Triassic Chinle Formation New Mexico USA support a diachronous rise of dinosaurs Earth and Planetary Science Letters 309 3 258 267 Bibcode 2011E amp PSL 309 258I doi 10 1016 j epsl 2011 07 015 ISSN 0012 821X Nordt Lee Atchley Stacy Dworkin Steve 1 November 2015 Collapse of the Late Triassic megamonsoon in western equatorial Pangea present day American Southwest GSA Bulletin 127 11 12 1798 1815 Bibcode 2015GSAB 127 1798N doi 10 1130 B31186 1 ISSN 0016 7606 Marsh Adam D Parker William G Stockli Daniel F Martz Jeffrey W 8 May 2019 Regional correlation of the Sonsela Member Upper Triassic Chinle Formation and detrital U Pb zircon data from the Sonsela Sandstone bed near the Sonsela Buttes northeastern Arizona USA support the presence of a distributive fluvial system Geosphere 15 4 1128 1139 Bibcode 2019Geosp 15 1128M doi 10 1130 GES02004 1 ISSN 1553 040X S2CID 164325311 Riggs N R Ash S R Barth A P Gehrels G E Wooden J L 1 November 2003 Isotopic age of the Black Forest Bed Petrified Forest Member Chinle Formation Arizona An example of dating a continental sandstone GSA Bulletin 115 11 1315 1323 Bibcode 2003GSAB 115 1315R doi 10 1130 B25254 1 ISSN 0016 7606 a b Dubiel R F 1989 Sedimentology and revised nomenclature of the Upper Triassic Chinle Formation and the Lower Jurassic Wingate Sandstone northwestern New Mexico and northeastern Arizona PDF New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Guidebook 40 213 223 Hintze L F Axen G J 1995 Geologic map of the Scarecrow Peak Quadrangle Washington County Utah and Lincoln County Nevada U S Geological Survey Geologic Quadrangle Map GQ 1759 a b Poole F G Stewart J H 1964 Chinle Formation and Glen Canyon Sandstone in northeastern Utah and northwestern Colorado U S Geological Survey Professional Paper 501 D D30 D39 doi 10 3133 pp501D a b c Barnes V E ed 1983 Tucumcari sheet Geologic atlas of Texas University of Texas Austin Bureau of Economic Geology Lucas Spencer G 2021 Triassic stratigraphy of the southeastern Colorado Plateau west central New Mexico PDF New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Series 72 229 240 Park stratigraphy of the Colorado Plateau Archived from the original on 1 April 2009 Further reading editLucas S G 1998 Global Triassic tetrapod biostratigraphy and biochronology Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology and Palaeoecology v 143 pp 347 384 External links editSpatial distribution of Chinle in Macrostrat Chinleana Chinle Confusion Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chinle Formation amp oldid 1172325313, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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