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Cow Branch Formation

The Cow Branch Formation is a Late Triassic geologic formation in Virginia and North Carolina in the eastern United States. The formation consists of cyclical beds of black and grey lacustrine (lake) mudstone and shale.[1][2][3][4][5] It is a konservat-lagerstätte renowned for its exceptionally preserved insect fossils, along with small reptiles,[6] fish, and plants.[7][8][9][10] Dinosaur tracks have also been reported from the formation.[11]

Cow Branch Formation
Stratigraphic range: mid-Norian?
Outcrop of the formation along the northwest wall of Solite Quarry Pit B in North Carolina
TypeGeological formation
Unit ofDan River Group
Thickness1900 m
Location
Coordinates36°24′N 80°00′W / 36.4°N 80.0°W / 36.4; -80.0
Approximate paleocoordinates5°30′N 20°24′W / 5.5°N 20.4°W / 5.5; -20.4
RegionVirginia
Country United States
Type section
Named byThayer, 1970
Cow Branch Formation (the United States)
Cow Branch Formation (North Carolina)

Geology edit

Regional setting edit

The Cow Branch Formation is exposed in the Dan River-Danville Basin,[2][4] a narrow half-graben which extends across the border of Virginia and North Carolina in the eastern United States. The basin has also been termed the Danville Basin[12] (emphasizing the northern portion in Virginia) or the Dan River Basin[13][1][9][5] (emphasizing the southern portion, in North Carolina). It is one of many Triassic-Jurassic rift basins stretching from northeast to southwest in eastern North America, collectively described as the Newark Supergroup.[5]

The Cow Branch Formation was initially distinguished by Meyertons (1963), working in the Virginian portion of the basin. He considered it to be a member of the Leaksville Formation, a name which encompassed almost all Triassic sediment in the basin.[12] Thayer (1970), working in North Carolina, split up the Leaksville Formation and raised its members to formation status within the Dan River Group.[13] The Cow Branch Formation was divided into upper and lower members, though the lower member has subsequently been renamed to the Walnut Cove Formation.[5] Recent revisions place the Cow Branch Formation above the Dry Fork Formation and below the Stoneville Formation.[5]

The type section of the Cow Branch Formation was a former roadcut along Virginia Route 856, in Pittsylvania County southeast of Cascade.[13] A new lectostratotype was proposed in 2015: a large stone quarry extending across the state line by the Dan River near Eden, North Carolina.[5] This quarry, commonly known as the Solite Quarry, is technically a cluster of three quarry pits, one in Pittsylvania County, Virginia and two in Rockingham County, North Carolina. The site is home to the most extensive and fossiliferous exposures of the formation. Exceptionally-preserved fossils were first reported from the site in 1978, and collection has continued to the present.[1][9][4]

Sedimentology and paleoenvironment edit

 
A relatively coarse-grained slab at the Solite Quarry, preserving numerous dinosaur footprints (Grallator)

The sediments of the Cow Branch Formation are dark grey to black in color and generally fine-grained. Blocky mudstones and thinly-laminated shale are the most common lithologies. The formation is thickest and most fine-grained at the state line, approximately in the middle of its exposed area. Here, the formation is about 1,900 metres (6,200 ft) thick. Coarser sediments such as dark grey sandstone are more prevalent to the southeast and northwest, though periodic black mudstone beds are still frequently encountered. Color is the most useful metric for distinguishing the Cow Branch Formation in the field, as red and purple sediments are practically absent, unlike the Dry Fork and Stoneville formations.[5]

The Cow Branch Formation represents a lacustrine (lake) system in a warm tropical climate, only around 2°[14] to 4°[15] north of the equator. Deposition preceded at an estimated rate of around 46.3 cm/kyr.[15] Bioturbation is almost completely absent, indicating that the lake bed was uninhabited by burrowing animals. Insect-bearing fossil layers were likely completely freshwater while the fish-bearing layers may have been somewhat saltier. As in modern rift lakes, high water levels could have initiated brine seeps along the edge of the basin, adding sodium into the lake system. Quartz is conspicuously absent even from the siliciclastic layers, having been replaced with albite (high-sodium feldspar) through diagenetic processes.[3][4]

The high frequency of dolomite in the formation indicates that the lake was strongly alkaline, with its water saturated with magnesium supplied from older carbonate rocks in the area.[3][4] The lack of bioturbation, mudcracks, or root casts has traditionally been taken as evidence that the waters were deep enough to be continually stratified, with the hypolimnion (deepest portion) completely lacking oxygen.[1][2][8] An alternative hypothesis suggests that the lake was rather shallow, albeit still deep enough to have been permanent during the formation's deposition. This is supported by the abundance of dolomite, a mineral which forms most easily in salty shallow-water environments. In addition, the insect-bearing layers nearly lack organic carbon, suggesting that the lakebed was fully oxygenated even at its deepest extent.[3][4] The lake sediments have a high concentration of fluorine, a fact which may help to resolve the near-absence of bioturbators. As with excessive salinity, excessive fluorine can be toxic for fully aquatic organisms (including bioturbators and freshwater plants), but air-breathing insects can persevere and thrive close to the shoreline.[3][4]

Sediment cycles edit

 
An outcrop showing cyclical beds of fine-grained sediments at the Solite Quarry

Sediment cycles are readily apparent in the formation, shifting between the extremes of black microlaminated shale and massive coarse mudstone.[4] These are identified as Van Houten cycles, a name applied to fluctuating lake depositional conditions throughout the Triassic rift basins of the Newark Supergroup.[16] Each cycle probably corresponds to variations in precipitation tied to the earth's precession, a type of Milankovitch cycle which oscillates on a scale exceeding 21,000 years.[4] 17[4] or 18[1] cycles are generally acknowledged in a continuous section at the Solite Quarry. Some sources estimate that up to 30 cycles were preserved at the site, factoring in all three quarry pits combined.[8] The semi-precessional (10,000 to 15,000 year) astronomical cycle is another strong influence on sedimentation.[15]

In the Cow Branch Formation, each cycle begins with a brief package of fine silty claystone.[1][2] The uppermost portion of this package is rich in mica and carbon, with very little calcareous material. It is followed shortly by a very thin but laterally extensive dolomite bed.[4][3] These layers correspond to a period of rising lake levels. Fossils of all types are most common in the succeeding black shale and associated lithologies, the point where the lakes are at their deepest extent.[1][6][2] Most of the fossiliferous unit is calcareous black shale, though thin beds of extremely fine siliclastic clay can also be found. Insect fossils are predominant in microlaminated carbon-poor shale while fish, plants, and coprolites tend to occur among interbedded carbon-rich dolomite, siltstone, and fine sandstone.[3][4] The fossiliferous layers occupy only a small portion of each cycle, less than a thousand years' worth of sedimentation.[3] They give way to a thicker and coarser series of shallow-water siltstone, first with a high proportion of pyrite and slickensides, then salt casts, and finally massive siltstone beds scoured by wave action.[1][6][2]

Age edit

The Cow Branch Formation is certainly from the Late Triassic, though there is disagreement as to the exact age of its sediments. The fossil content and depositional environment are very similar to the Lockatong Formation in the Newark Basin of the Mid Atlantic region, and to a lesser extent the Chinle Formation in the southwest United States.[1] During the late 20th century, these formations were often assigned to the later part of the Carnian stage.[1][6][7] This was justified by their fossil content, particularly palynomorphs, which were comparable to the Middle Keuper of Germany.[1][6] The conchostracan Anyuanestheria has been reported from both the German Middle Schilfsandstein and the "lower Cow Branch Formation"[17] (now known as the Walnut Cove Formation).[5]

A Carnian age has been brought into doubt by a more diverse suite of dating methods in the Newark Supergroup.[5] Starting in the 1990s, the depositional history of the Newark Basin was recalibrated through a combination of core drilling, radiometric dating, cyclostratigraphy, and magnetostratigraphy. The end result was the Newark astrochronostratigraphic polarity time scale (APTS), a unifying system which provides precise ages for sediment layers within the basin.[18][16] The resulting ages were younger than previously expected. For example, the Lockatong Formation was assigned a mid-Norian age (222.56 – 218.11 Ma), rather than late Carnian.[16]

The same techniques used to create the Newark APTS can be applied to other basins with continuous cyclical deposition, such as the Dan River-Danville Basin. A magnetostratigraphic sequence has been reconstructed for the Dan River-Danville Basin since 1997, assisting correlation to the Newark Basin.[14] There are at least twelve pairs of normal-reverse magnetic polarity chrons recorded in the Dan River-Danville Basin. Four of these magnetostratigraphic intervals were present through the deposition of the Cow Branch Formation: a long reverse chron (D3r), followed by a short normal chron (D4n), a moderate-length reverse chron (D4r) and finally a long normal chron (D5n). These four chrons have been equated with chrons E11r, E12n, E12r, and E13n (respectively) in the Newark Basin.[14][5] Chrons E11r to E13n apply to a period of time extending from the early-mid Lockatong Formation (Nursery Member) up to the early Passaic Formation (Warford Member), 221.47 Ma to 216.97 Ma.[16] If the Cow Branch Formation is equivalent to this interval, then it would be firmly positioned within the Norian stage.[5] The fossil beds of the Solite Quarry are in the lower-middle part of the formation, with an estimated age close to 220 Ma.[15][5]

Paleobiota edit

Color key
Taxon Reclassified taxon Taxon falsely reported as present Dubious taxon or junior synonym Ichnotaxon Ootaxon Morphotaxon
Notes
Uncertain or tentative taxa are in small text; crossed out taxa are discredited.

Reptiles edit

Reptiles of the Cow Branch Formation
Genus / Taxon Species Material Notes Images
Apatopus A. sp. Footprints[1][2][19] Presumed phytosaur footprints
Atreipus A. milfordensis[20] Footprints[20][7][2][19] Footprints of early quadrupedal dinosaurs or dinosauromorphs, possibly ornithischians.[20]
Grallator G. sp. Footprints[1][19] Presumed dinosaur footprints
 
Gwyneddichnium G. sp. Footprints[19] Footprints, presumably created by small tanystropheids such as Tanytrachelos.[21]
Mecistotrachelos[22] M. apeoros[22] Multiple partial skeletons, two of which have been described[22] A probable archosauromorph with elongated ribs, presumably hosting gliding membranes.[22]
 
Rutiodon R. carolinensis[7] A partial skeleton[5] and teeth.[1] A phytosaurid (or mystriosuchine) phytosaur
 
Tanytrachelos[6] T. ahynis[6] Numerous specimens, including complete skeletons.[6] A small tanystropheid archosauromorph closely related to Tanystropheus. Some specimens preserve traces of muscles and ligaments near the tail.[6][8]
 

Fish edit

Undescribed pholidophorids and holosteans were present.[7][2] A relatively large freshwater shark tooth is also known from the formation.[8]

Fish of the Cow Branch Formation
Genus / Taxon Species Material Notes Images
Diplurus D. cf. newarki[2][8] At least one large specimen[1] A coelacanth, sometimes placed in the genus Osteopleurus.[7][2]
Cionichthys C. sp.[2][8] A redfieldiiform[2]
cf. Pariostegus cf. Pariostegus sp.[7][2][8] A coelacanth
Semionotus S. brauni.[7][2][8] At least three specimens[1] A semionotiform ginglymodian
Synorichthys S. sp.[7][2][8] "Several partial skeletons"[1] A redfieldiiform[2]
Turseodus T. spp.[7][2][8] At least two specimens[1] A "palaeoniscid"[7][2]-grade actinopterygian

Arthropods edit

"Conchostracans" (clam shrimp) from the formation have typically been assigned to the genera Cyzicus and Palaeolimnadia,[1][2] though they may instead be species of Eustheria.[5] Apart from arthropods, other invertebrate fossils from the Cow Branch Formation include (uncommon) Scoyenia burrows and indeterminate unionid bivalves.[7]

The most abundant insects are beetles and aquatic hemipterans, but most of these fossils have yet to be assigned to the species level. In terms of named diversity, dipterans (flies) make up the bulk of the assemblage, despite representing only 1.5% of insect fossils from the Solite Quarry.[4] Within the shale layers bearing insect fossils, aquatic insects are most abundant in the early part of a layer, while terrestrial insects maintain a low but steady presence through the entire layer.[3]

Arthropods of the Cow Branch Formation
Genus / Taxon Species Material Notes Images
Alinka[23] A. cara[23] Two specimens.[23] A procramptonomyiid fly.[24]
Archescytinidae A. indet.[8] Indeterminate archescytinid thrips.
Architipula A. youngi[23] "Excellent specimens"[8] A limoniid crane fly in the subfamily Architipulinae.[24]
Argyrarachne[25] A. solitus[25] A single juvenile specimen missing the abdomen.[25] An araneomorph spider, one of the oldest known potential species of araneomorph.[25]
Blattodea B. indet.[2][8] Indeterminate cockroaches.
Brachyrhyphys[24] B. distortus[24] One distorted female specimen.[24] A protorhyphid fly.[24]
Cascadelcana[26] C. virginiana[26] A wing.[26] The oldest known member of Elcanidae, a family of cricket-like orthopterans.[26]
?Crosaphis C. virginiensis[24] One specimen.[24] A crosaphidid fly tentatively assigned to Crosaphis.[24]
cf. Clytiopsis cf. C. sp.[7][2] A crayfish-like decapod.[7][2]
Darwinula D. spp.[7][2] Freshwater ostracods (seed shrimp).
Diptera D. indet.[7][2] Indeterminate flies, including eoptychopterids and culicomorphs.[24]
Holcoptera H. solitensis[27] Two elytra with preserved color patterns.[27] A water beetle in the family Coptoclavidae.[27]
Leehermania[28] L. prorova[28] Numerous specimens.[28] A beetle, originally identified as the oldest known staphylinid (rove beetle),[28] and later classified as a myxophagan.[29]
Metarchilimonia[24] M. krzeminksorum[24] Two specimens, one of which is a female.[24] A limoniid crane fly in the subfamily Architipulinae.[24]
M. solita[24] One specimen.[24] A limoniid crane fly in the subfamily Architipulinae.[24]
Mormolucoides M. articulatus Numerous specimens preserved together in "death beds".[30] Insect larvae with thick mandibles, likely the aquatic grubs of beetles such as Holcoptera.[30]
Naucoridae N. indet.[8] Indeterminate naucorids (creeping water bugs).
Orthoptera O. indet.[8] Indeterminate orthopterans (crickets, grasshoppers, and allies)
Phoroschizidae P. indet. Indeterminate stem-group beetles.
?Phyllocarida ?P. indet.[1][7] Possible indeterminate phyllocarid crustaceans.[1][7] May represent hemipterans or fly pupae instead.[3]
Phyloblatta P. grimaldii[31] One of the youngest known phyloblattid cockroaches.[31]
Prosechamyia[24] P. dimedia[24] One specimen.[24] A stem-group brachyceran fly.[24]
P. trimedia[24] One specimen.[24] A stem-group brachyceran fly.[24]
Pseudopolycentropodes[32] P. virginicus[32] Three specimens.[32] A scorpionfly in the family Pseudopolycentropodidae.[32] Initially misidentified as a trichopteran (caddisfly).[8]
Thysanoptera T. indet.[8] Indeterminate thrips.
Tipulomorpha T. indet. Indeterminate tipulomorphs (crane flies and allies).
Triassonepa[33] T. solensis[33] 87 specimens.[33] The oldest known belostomatid (predaceous water bug).[33]
Triassopsychoda[24] T. olseni[24] One female specimen.[24] A probable psychodid (drain fly).[24]
Triassothrips[34] T. virginicus[34] Seven specimens.[34] One of the oldest known thrips.[34]
Veriplecia V. rugosa[24] One male specimen.[24] A paraxymyiid fly.[24]
Virginiptera[24] V. certa[24] Two specimens.[24] A paraxymyiid fly.[24] One specimen was initially misidentified as Crosaphis.[8]
V. lativentra[24] One male specimen.[24] A paraxymyiid fly.[24]
V. similis[24] Two male specimens.[24] A paraxymyiid fly.[24]
Yalea[35] Y. argentata[23] One male specimen.[23] A procramptonomyiid fly.[24]
Y. rectimedia[24] One female specimen.[24] A procramptonomyiid fly.[24]

Plants edit

Plant fossils are abundant. The most common examples are conifer foliage, followed by bennettitales and ginkgophytes. Ferns and sphenophytes are also present, though less common. Two endemic forms, the seed taxon Edenia villisperma and the leaf taxon Pannaulika triassica, have been compared to angiosperms (flowering plants) in their structure, though they likely are unrelated to true angiosperms.[4]

Plants of the Cow Branch Formation
Genus / Taxon Species Notes Images
Brachyphyllum B. sp.[8] Abundant conifer leaf-bearing shoots.[4]
cf. Compsostrobus cf. C. neotericus[1][2][8] A conifer seed cone.
Cyathoforma C. sp.[8] Fronds of a large cyatheacean tree fern.[36][37]
cf. Dechellyia cf. D. sp.[1][2] Leaves of an enigmatic gymnosperm, often considered a gnetalean.
Dictyophyllum D. sp.[1][2][8] Fronds of a dipterid fern.[4]
Edenia[38] E. villisperma[38] A hairy parachuting seed superficially similar to the achenes of modern Platanus (plane trees and American sycamores).[38]
cf. Elatocladus cf. E. sp.[8] Conifer leaf-bearing shoots.
Eretmophyllum Common ginkgophyte leaves.[4]
Fraxinopteris F. sp.[8] Winged gymnosperm seeds.[4]
Glandulozamites G. sp.[1][2] Cycad leaves.
cf. Grammaephloios cf. G. sp.[1][2] A lycopod.[1]
Lepacyclotes L. sp.[8] A lycopod.
"Lepidodendron type"[8] A lycopod, briefly listed in a single paper on the formation.[8]
Lonchopteris L. virginiensis[1][2][8] Fern fronds. The species has sometimes been considered referable to another fern genus, Cynepteris.[8]
Metreophyllum M. sp.[8] Leaves of a ginkgophyte similar to Eretmophyllum.[8]
Neocalamites N. cf. knowltonii[1][2][8] Fragmentary leaf and stem impressions of a sphenophyte (horsetail).
Pagiophyllum P. diffusum[8] Conifer leaf-bearing shoots.
P. simpsoniae[8] Conifer leaf-bearing shoots.
P. sp.[1][2][8] Abundant conifer leaf-bearing shoots.[4]
Pannaulika[37] P. triassica[37] Leaves of an enigmatic plant originally described as similar to dicot angiosperms,[37][8] though more likely a species of fern.[4]
Pelourdea P. sp.[8] Leaves of an enigmatic gymnosperm, possibly a type of conifer.
Podozamites P. sp.[1][2][8] Conifer leaves.
Pseudohirmerella P. delawarensis Seed cones of an early cheirolepid conifer.[39][40] Fossils of this species from the Solite Quarry were previously known by the names Glyptolepis platysperma[1][2] or Hirmeriella sp.[8]
Pterophyllum P. cf. Ctenophyllum giganteum.[1][2] Common bennettitale leaves.[4]
cf. Sagenopteris cf. S. sp.[1][2] Leaves of a caytonialean "seed fern".
Sphenobaiera S. sp.[8] Uncommon ginkgophyte leaves.[4]
Sphenozamites S. sp.[8] Bennettitale leaves
Todites T. gaillardotii? Fronds of an osmundaceous fern. Fossils of this species were initially described as Neuropteris gaillardotii and N. linnaeaefolia.[41] The latter species has been reported from the Solite Quarry under the name Acrostichites linnaefolius.[1][2][8] The two species have subsequently been synonymized and referred to the genus Todites.[42][43]
Wingatea W. sp.[8] Fronds of a gleicheniaceous fern.[8]
cf. Zamiostrobus cf. Z. lissocardus[1][2][8] A cycad seed cone.
Zamites Z. powellii[1][2][8] Common bennettitale leaves.[4]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak Olsen, Paul E.; Remington, Charles L.; Cornet, Bruce; Thomson, Keith S. (1978-08-25). "Cyclic Change in Late Triassic Lacustrine Communities". Science. 201 (4357): 729–733. doi:10.1126/science.201.4357.729. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 17750230. S2CID 23168710.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an Olsen, Paul E.; Schlische, Roy W.; Gore, Pamela J.W. (1989). Tectonic, Depositional, and paleoecological history of Early Mesozoic rift basins, eastern North America: 28th International Geological Congress Field Trip Guidebook T351 (PDF). Washington D.C.: American Geophysical Union. pp. 1–174. doi:10.1029/FT351. ISBN 0875906583.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Liutkus, C. M.; Beard, J. S.; Fraser, N. C.; Ragland, P. C. (2010). "Use of fine-scale stratigraphy and chemostratigraphy to evaluate conditions of deposition and preservation of a Triassic Lagerstätte, south-central Virginia". Journal of Paleolimnology. 44 (2): 645–666. Bibcode:2010JPall..44..645L. doi:10.1007/s10933-010-9445-1. ISSN 0921-2728. S2CID 85464908.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Liutkus-Pierce, Cynthia M.; Fraser, Nicholas C.; Heckert, Andrew B. (2014), Bailey, Christopher M.; Coiner, Lorrie V. (eds.), "Stratigraphy, sedimentology, and paleontology of the Upper Triassic Solite Quarry, North Carolina and Virginia", Elevating Geoscience in the Southeastern United States: New Ideas about Old Terranes—Field Guides for the GSA Southeastern Section Meeting, Blacksburg, Virginia, 2014, Geological Society of America, pp. 255–269, doi:10.1130/2014.0035(09), ISBN 978-0-8137-0035-9, retrieved 2023-12-18
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Olsen, Paul E.; Reid, Jeffrey C.; Taylor, Kenneth B.; Whiteside, Jessica H.; Kent, Dennis V. (2015). "Revised stratigraphy of Late Triassic age strata of the Dan River Basin (Virginia and North Carolina, USA) based on drill core and outcrop data". Southeastern Geology. 51 (1): 1–31. doi:10.7916/D82F7MSJ.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i Olsen, Paul E. (1979). "A new aquatic Eosuchian from the Newark Supergroup (Late Triassic–Early Jurassic) of North Carolina and Virginia" (PDF). Postilla. 176: 1–14.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Olsen, Paul E. (1988). "8. Paleoecology and Paleoenvironments of the Continental Early Mesozoic Newark Supergroup of Eastern North America" (PDF). In Manspeizer, Warren (ed.). Triassic-Jurassic Rifting and the Opening of the Atlantic Ocean. Amsterdam: Elsevier. pp. 185–230. doi:10.1016/B978-0-444-42903-2.50013-0.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au Fraser, Nicholas C.; Grimaldi, David A.; Olsen, Paul E.; Axsmith, Brian (1996). "A Triassic Lagerstätte from eastern North America". Nature. 380 (6575): 615–619. Bibcode:1996Natur.380..615F. doi:10.1038/380615a0. ISSN 0028-0836. S2CID 4360335.
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  11. ^ Weishampel et al., 2004, pp.517-607
  12. ^ a b Meyertons, C.T. (1963). "Triassic formations of the Danville basin". Virginia Division of Mineral Resources Report of Investigations. 6: 1–65.
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  14. ^ a b c Kent, Dennis V.; Olsen, Paul E. (1997). "Paleomagnetism of Upper Triassic continental sedimentary rocks from the Dan River–Danville rift basin (eastern North America)". Geological Society of America Bulletin. 109 (3): 366–377. Bibcode:1997GSAB..109..366K. doi:10.1130/0016-7606(1997)109<0366:POUTCS>2.3.CO;2.
  15. ^ a b c d Whiteside, Jessica H.; Grogan, Danielle S.; Olsen, Paul E.; Kent, Dennis V. (2011-05-31). "Climatically driven biogeographic provinces of Late Triassic tropical Pangea". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 108 (22): 8972–8977. Bibcode:2011PNAS..108.8972W. doi:10.1073/pnas.1102473108. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 3107300. PMID 21571639.
  16. ^ a b c d Kent, Dennis V.; Olsen, Paul E.; Muttoni, Giovanni (2017-03-01). "Astrochronostratigraphic polarity time scale (APTS) for the Late Triassic and Early Jurassic from continental sediments and correlation with standard marine stages" (PDF). Earth-Science Reviews. 166: 153–180. Bibcode:2017ESRv..166..153K. doi:10.1016/j.earscirev.2016.12.014. ISSN 0012-8252.
  17. ^ Kozur, Heinz W.; Weems, Robert E. (2007). "Upper Triassic conchostracan biostratigraphy of the continental rift basins of eastern North America: Its importance for correlating Newark Supergroup events with the Germanic basin and the international geologic time scale". New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin. 41: 137–188.
  18. ^ Muttoni, Giovanni; Kent, Dennis V.; Olsen, Paul E.; Di Stefano, Piero; Lowrie, William; Bernasconi, Stefano M.; Hernández, Fátima Martín (2004). "Tethyan magnetostratigraphy from Pizzo Mondello (Sicily) and correlation to the Late Triassic Newark astrochronological polarity time scale". Geological Society of America Bulletin. 116 (9): 1043. Bibcode:2004GSAB..116.1043M. doi:10.1130/b25326.1. hdl:2434/48459. ISSN 0016-7606.
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Bibliography edit

  • Weishampel, David B.; Peter Dodson, and Halszka Osmólska (eds.). 2004. The Dinosauria, 2nd edition, 1–880. Berkeley: University of California Press. Accessed 2019-02-21. ISBN 0-520-24209-2

branch, formation, late, triassic, geologic, formation, virginia, north, carolina, eastern, united, states, formation, consists, cyclical, beds, black, grey, lacustrine, lake, mudstone, shale, konservat, lagerstätte, renowned, exceptionally, preserved, insect,. The Cow Branch Formation is a Late Triassic geologic formation in Virginia and North Carolina in the eastern United States The formation consists of cyclical beds of black and grey lacustrine lake mudstone and shale 1 2 3 4 5 It is a konservat lagerstatte renowned for its exceptionally preserved insect fossils along with small reptiles 6 fish and plants 7 8 9 10 Dinosaur tracks have also been reported from the formation 11 Cow Branch FormationStratigraphic range mid Norian PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Outcrop of the formation along the northwest wall of Solite Quarry Pit B in North CarolinaTypeGeological formationUnit ofDan River GroupThickness1900 mLocationCoordinates36 24 N 80 00 W 36 4 N 80 0 W 36 4 80 0Approximate paleocoordinates5 30 N 20 24 W 5 5 N 20 4 W 5 5 20 4RegionVirginiaCountry United StatesType sectionNamed byThayer 1970Cow Branch Formation the United States Show map of the United StatesCow Branch Formation North Carolina Show map of North CarolinaContents 1 Geology 1 1 Regional setting 1 2 Sedimentology and paleoenvironment 1 2 1 Sediment cycles 2 Age 3 Paleobiota 3 1 Reptiles 3 2 Fish 3 3 Arthropods 3 4 Plants 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 6 1 BibliographyGeology editRegional setting edit The Cow Branch Formation is exposed in the Dan River Danville Basin 2 4 a narrow half graben which extends across the border of Virginia and North Carolina in the eastern United States The basin has also been termed the Danville Basin 12 emphasizing the northern portion in Virginia or the Dan River Basin 13 1 9 5 emphasizing the southern portion in North Carolina It is one of many Triassic Jurassic rift basins stretching from northeast to southwest in eastern North America collectively described as the Newark Supergroup 5 The Cow Branch Formation was initially distinguished by Meyertons 1963 working in the Virginian portion of the basin He considered it to be a member of the Leaksville Formation a name which encompassed almost all Triassic sediment in the basin 12 Thayer 1970 working in North Carolina split up the Leaksville Formation and raised its members to formation status within the Dan River Group 13 The Cow Branch Formation was divided into upper and lower members though the lower member has subsequently been renamed to the Walnut Cove Formation 5 Recent revisions place the Cow Branch Formation above the Dry Fork Formation and below the Stoneville Formation 5 The type section of the Cow Branch Formation was a former roadcut along Virginia Route 856 in Pittsylvania County southeast of Cascade 13 A new lectostratotype was proposed in 2015 a large stone quarry extending across the state line by the Dan River near Eden North Carolina 5 This quarry commonly known as the Solite Quarry is technically a cluster of three quarry pits one in Pittsylvania County Virginia and two in Rockingham County North Carolina The site is home to the most extensive and fossiliferous exposures of the formation Exceptionally preserved fossils were first reported from the site in 1978 and collection has continued to the present 1 9 4 Sedimentology and paleoenvironment edit nbsp A relatively coarse grained slab at the Solite Quarry preserving numerous dinosaur footprints Grallator The sediments of the Cow Branch Formation are dark grey to black in color and generally fine grained Blocky mudstones and thinly laminated shale are the most common lithologies The formation is thickest and most fine grained at the state line approximately in the middle of its exposed area Here the formation is about 1 900 metres 6 200 ft thick Coarser sediments such as dark grey sandstone are more prevalent to the southeast and northwest though periodic black mudstone beds are still frequently encountered Color is the most useful metric for distinguishing the Cow Branch Formation in the field as red and purple sediments are practically absent unlike the Dry Fork and Stoneville formations 5 The Cow Branch Formation represents a lacustrine lake system in a warm tropical climate only around 2 14 to 4 15 north of the equator Deposition preceded at an estimated rate of around 46 3 cm kyr 15 Bioturbation is almost completely absent indicating that the lake bed was uninhabited by burrowing animals Insect bearing fossil layers were likely completely freshwater while the fish bearing layers may have been somewhat saltier As in modern rift lakes high water levels could have initiated brine seeps along the edge of the basin adding sodium into the lake system Quartz is conspicuously absent even from the siliciclastic layers having been replaced with albite high sodium feldspar through diagenetic processes 3 4 The high frequency of dolomite in the formation indicates that the lake was strongly alkaline with its water saturated with magnesium supplied from older carbonate rocks in the area 3 4 The lack of bioturbation mudcracks or root casts has traditionally been taken as evidence that the waters were deep enough to be continually stratified with the hypolimnion deepest portion completely lacking oxygen 1 2 8 An alternative hypothesis suggests that the lake was rather shallow albeit still deep enough to have been permanent during the formation s deposition This is supported by the abundance of dolomite a mineral which forms most easily in salty shallow water environments In addition the insect bearing layers nearly lack organic carbon suggesting that the lakebed was fully oxygenated even at its deepest extent 3 4 The lake sediments have a high concentration of fluorine a fact which may help to resolve the near absence of bioturbators As with excessive salinity excessive fluorine can be toxic for fully aquatic organisms including bioturbators and freshwater plants but air breathing insects can persevere and thrive close to the shoreline 3 4 Sediment cycles edit nbsp An outcrop showing cyclical beds of fine grained sediments at the Solite Quarry Sediment cycles are readily apparent in the formation shifting between the extremes of black microlaminated shale and massive coarse mudstone 4 These are identified as Van Houten cycles a name applied to fluctuating lake depositional conditions throughout the Triassic rift basins of the Newark Supergroup 16 Each cycle probably corresponds to variations in precipitation tied to the earth s precession a type of Milankovitch cycle which oscillates on a scale exceeding 21 000 years 4 17 4 or 18 1 cycles are generally acknowledged in a continuous section at the Solite Quarry Some sources estimate that up to 30 cycles were preserved at the site factoring in all three quarry pits combined 8 The semi precessional 10 000 to 15 000 year astronomical cycle is another strong influence on sedimentation 15 In the Cow Branch Formation each cycle begins with a brief package of fine silty claystone 1 2 The uppermost portion of this package is rich in mica and carbon with very little calcareous material It is followed shortly by a very thin but laterally extensive dolomite bed 4 3 These layers correspond to a period of rising lake levels Fossils of all types are most common in the succeeding black shale and associated lithologies the point where the lakes are at their deepest extent 1 6 2 Most of the fossiliferous unit is calcareous black shale though thin beds of extremely fine siliclastic clay can also be found Insect fossils are predominant in microlaminated carbon poor shale while fish plants and coprolites tend to occur among interbedded carbon rich dolomite siltstone and fine sandstone 3 4 The fossiliferous layers occupy only a small portion of each cycle less than a thousand years worth of sedimentation 3 They give way to a thicker and coarser series of shallow water siltstone first with a high proportion of pyrite and slickensides then salt casts and finally massive siltstone beds scoured by wave action 1 6 2 Age editThe Cow Branch Formation is certainly from the Late Triassic though there is disagreement as to the exact age of its sediments The fossil content and depositional environment are very similar to the Lockatong Formation in the Newark Basin of the Mid Atlantic region and to a lesser extent the Chinle Formation in the southwest United States 1 During the late 20th century these formations were often assigned to the later part of the Carnian stage 1 6 7 This was justified by their fossil content particularly palynomorphs which were comparable to the Middle Keuper of Germany 1 6 The conchostracan Anyuanestheria has been reported from both the German Middle Schilfsandstein and the lower Cow Branch Formation 17 now known as the Walnut Cove Formation 5 A Carnian age has been brought into doubt by a more diverse suite of dating methods in the Newark Supergroup 5 Starting in the 1990s the depositional history of the Newark Basin was recalibrated through a combination of core drilling radiometric dating cyclostratigraphy and magnetostratigraphy The end result was the Newark astrochronostratigraphic polarity time scale APTS a unifying system which provides precise ages for sediment layers within the basin 18 16 The resulting ages were younger than previously expected For example the Lockatong Formation was assigned a mid Norian age 222 56 218 11 Ma rather than late Carnian 16 The same techniques used to create the Newark APTS can be applied to other basins with continuous cyclical deposition such as the Dan River Danville Basin A magnetostratigraphic sequence has been reconstructed for the Dan River Danville Basin since 1997 assisting correlation to the Newark Basin 14 There are at least twelve pairs of normal reverse magnetic polarity chrons recorded in the Dan River Danville Basin Four of these magnetostratigraphic intervals were present through the deposition of the Cow Branch Formation a long reverse chron D3r followed by a short normal chron D4n a moderate length reverse chron D4r and finally a long normal chron D5n These four chrons have been equated with chrons E11r E12n E12r and E13n respectively in the Newark Basin 14 5 Chrons E11r to E13n apply to a period of time extending from the early mid Lockatong Formation Nursery Member up to the early Passaic Formation Warford Member 221 47 Ma to 216 97 Ma 16 If the Cow Branch Formation is equivalent to this interval then it would be firmly positioned within the Norian stage 5 The fossil beds of the Solite Quarry are in the lower middle part of the formation with an estimated age close to 220 Ma 15 5 Paleobiota editColor key Taxon Reclassified taxon Taxon falsely reported as present Dubious taxon or junior synonym Ichnotaxon Ootaxon Morphotaxon Notes Uncertain or tentative taxa are in small text crossed out taxa are discredited Reptiles edit Reptiles of the Cow Branch Formation Genus Taxon Species Material Notes Images Apatopus A sp Footprints 1 2 19 Presumed phytosaur footprints Atreipus A milfordensis 20 Footprints 20 7 2 19 Footprints of early quadrupedal dinosaurs or dinosauromorphs possibly ornithischians 20 Grallator G sp Footprints 1 19 Presumed dinosaur footprints nbsp Gwyneddichnium G sp Footprints 19 Footprints presumably created by small tanystropheids such as Tanytrachelos 21 Mecistotrachelos 22 M apeoros 22 Multiple partial skeletons two of which have been described 22 A probable archosauromorph with elongated ribs presumably hosting gliding membranes 22 nbsp Rutiodon R carolinensis 7 A partial skeleton 5 and teeth 1 A phytosaurid or mystriosuchine phytosaur nbsp Tanytrachelos 6 T ahynis 6 Numerous specimens including complete skeletons 6 A small tanystropheid archosauromorph closely related to Tanystropheus Some specimens preserve traces of muscles and ligaments near the tail 6 8 nbsp Fish edit Undescribed pholidophorids and holosteans were present 7 2 A relatively large freshwater shark tooth is also known from the formation 8 Fish of the Cow Branch Formation Genus Taxon Species Material Notes Images Diplurus D cf newarki 2 8 At least one large specimen 1 A coelacanth sometimes placed in the genus Osteopleurus 7 2 Cionichthys C sp 2 8 A redfieldiiform 2 cf Pariostegus cf Pariostegus sp 7 2 8 A coelacanth Semionotus S brauni 7 2 8 At least three specimens 1 A semionotiform ginglymodian Synorichthys S sp 7 2 8 Several partial skeletons 1 A redfieldiiform 2 Turseodus T spp 7 2 8 At least two specimens 1 A palaeoniscid 7 2 grade actinopterygian Arthropods edit Conchostracans clam shrimp from the formation have typically been assigned to the genera Cyzicus and Palaeolimnadia 1 2 though they may instead be species of Eustheria 5 Apart from arthropods other invertebrate fossils from the Cow Branch Formation include uncommon Scoyenia burrows and indeterminate unionid bivalves 7 The most abundant insects are beetles and aquatic hemipterans but most of these fossils have yet to be assigned to the species level In terms of named diversity dipterans flies make up the bulk of the assemblage despite representing only 1 5 of insect fossils from the Solite Quarry 4 Within the shale layers bearing insect fossils aquatic insects are most abundant in the early part of a layer while terrestrial insects maintain a low but steady presence through the entire layer 3 Arthropods of the Cow Branch Formation Genus Taxon Species Material Notes Images Alinka 23 A cara 23 Two specimens 23 A procramptonomyiid fly 24 Archescytinidae A indet 8 Indeterminate archescytinid thrips Architipula A youngi 23 Excellent specimens 8 A limoniid crane fly in the subfamily Architipulinae 24 Argyrarachne 25 A solitus 25 A single juvenile specimen missing the abdomen 25 An araneomorph spider one of the oldest known potential species of araneomorph 25 Blattodea B indet 2 8 Indeterminate cockroaches Brachyrhyphys 24 B distortus 24 One distorted female specimen 24 A protorhyphid fly 24 Cascadelcana 26 C virginiana 26 A wing 26 The oldest known member of Elcanidae a family of cricket like orthopterans 26 Crosaphis C virginiensis 24 One specimen 24 A crosaphidid fly tentatively assigned to Crosaphis 24 cf Clytiopsis cf C sp 7 2 A crayfish like decapod 7 2 Darwinula D spp 7 2 Freshwater ostracods seed shrimp Diptera D indet 7 2 Indeterminate flies including eoptychopterids and culicomorphs 24 Holcoptera H solitensis 27 Two elytra with preserved color patterns 27 A water beetle in the family Coptoclavidae 27 Leehermania 28 L prorova 28 Numerous specimens 28 A beetle originally identified as the oldest known staphylinid rove beetle 28 and later classified as a myxophagan 29 Metarchilimonia 24 M krzeminksorum 24 Two specimens one of which is a female 24 A limoniid crane fly in the subfamily Architipulinae 24 M solita 24 One specimen 24 A limoniid crane fly in the subfamily Architipulinae 24 Mormolucoides M articulatus Numerous specimens preserved together in death beds 30 Insect larvae with thick mandibles likely the aquatic grubs of beetles such as Holcoptera 30 Naucoridae N indet 8 Indeterminate naucorids creeping water bugs Orthoptera O indet 8 Indeterminate orthopterans crickets grasshoppers and allies Phoroschizidae P indet Indeterminate stem group beetles Phyllocarida P indet 1 7 Possible indeterminate phyllocarid crustaceans 1 7 May represent hemipterans or fly pupae instead 3 Phyloblatta P grimaldii 31 One of the youngest known phyloblattid cockroaches 31 Prosechamyia 24 P dimedia 24 One specimen 24 A stem group brachyceran fly 24 P trimedia 24 One specimen 24 A stem group brachyceran fly 24 Pseudopolycentropodes 32 P virginicus 32 Three specimens 32 A scorpionfly in the family Pseudopolycentropodidae 32 Initially misidentified as a trichopteran caddisfly 8 Thysanoptera T indet 8 Indeterminate thrips Tipulomorpha T indet Indeterminate tipulomorphs crane flies and allies Triassonepa 33 T solensis 33 87 specimens 33 The oldest known belostomatid predaceous water bug 33 Triassopsychoda 24 T olseni 24 One female specimen 24 A probable psychodid drain fly 24 Triassothrips 34 T virginicus 34 Seven specimens 34 One of the oldest known thrips 34 Veriplecia V rugosa 24 One male specimen 24 A paraxymyiid fly 24 Virginiptera 24 V certa 24 Two specimens 24 A paraxymyiid fly 24 One specimen was initially misidentified as Crosaphis 8 V lativentra 24 One male specimen 24 A paraxymyiid fly 24 V similis 24 Two male specimens 24 A paraxymyiid fly 24 Yalea 35 Y argentata 23 One male specimen 23 A procramptonomyiid fly 24 Y rectimedia 24 One female specimen 24 A procramptonomyiid fly 24 Plants edit Plant fossils are abundant The most common examples are conifer foliage followed by bennettitales and ginkgophytes Ferns and sphenophytes are also present though less common Two endemic forms the seed taxon Edenia villisperma and the leaf taxon Pannaulika triassica have been compared to angiosperms flowering plants in their structure though they likely are unrelated to true angiosperms 4 Plants of the Cow Branch Formation Genus Taxon Species Notes Images Brachyphyllum B sp 8 Abundant conifer leaf bearing shoots 4 cf Compsostrobus cf C neotericus 1 2 8 A conifer seed cone Cyathoforma C sp 8 Fronds of a large cyatheacean tree fern 36 37 cf Dechellyia cf D sp 1 2 Leaves of an enigmatic gymnosperm often considered a gnetalean Dictyophyllum D sp 1 2 8 Fronds of a dipterid fern 4 Edenia 38 E villisperma 38 A hairy parachuting seed superficially similar to the achenes of modern Platanus plane trees and American sycamores 38 cf Elatocladus cf E sp 8 Conifer leaf bearing shoots Eretmophyllum Common ginkgophyte leaves 4 Fraxinopteris F sp 8 Winged gymnosperm seeds 4 Glandulozamites G sp 1 2 Cycad leaves cf Grammaephloios cf G sp 1 2 A lycopod 1 Lepacyclotes L sp 8 A lycopod Lepidodendron type 8 A lycopod briefly listed in a single paper on the formation 8 Lonchopteris L virginiensis 1 2 8 Fern fronds The species has sometimes been considered referable to another fern genus Cynepteris 8 Metreophyllum M sp 8 Leaves of a ginkgophyte similar to Eretmophyllum 8 Neocalamites N cf knowltonii 1 2 8 Fragmentary leaf and stem impressions of a sphenophyte horsetail Pagiophyllum P diffusum 8 Conifer leaf bearing shoots P simpsoniae 8 Conifer leaf bearing shoots P sp 1 2 8 Abundant conifer leaf bearing shoots 4 Pannaulika 37 P triassica 37 Leaves of an enigmatic plant originally described as similar to dicot angiosperms 37 8 though more likely a species of fern 4 Pelourdea P sp 8 Leaves of an enigmatic gymnosperm possibly a type of conifer Podozamites P sp 1 2 8 Conifer leaves Pseudohirmerella P delawarensis Seed cones of an early cheirolepid conifer 39 40 Fossils of this species from the Solite Quarry were previously known by the names Glyptolepis platysperma 1 2 or Hirmeriella sp 8 Pterophyllum P cf Ctenophyllum giganteum 1 2 Common bennettitale leaves 4 cf Sagenopteris cf S sp 1 2 Leaves of a caytonialean seed fern Sphenobaiera S sp 8 Uncommon ginkgophyte leaves 4 Sphenozamites S sp 8 Bennettitale leaves Todites T gaillardotii Fronds of an osmundaceous fern Fossils of this species were initially described as Neuropteris gaillardotii and N linnaeaefolia 41 The latter species has been reported from the Solite Quarry under the name Acrostichites linnaefolius 1 2 8 The two species have subsequently been synonymized and referred to the genus Todites 42 43 Wingatea W sp 8 Fronds of a gleicheniaceous fern 8 cf Zamiostrobus cf Z lissocardus 1 2 8 A cycad seed cone Zamites Z powellii 1 2 8 Common bennettitale leaves 4 Gallery edit nbsp Southwest wall of Solite Quarry Pit B nbsp Conchostracan fossils in black shales Solite Quarry Pit B nbsp Fossil fish spine in black shale from an outcrop near Madison North Carolina nbsp Vertebrate tooth in black shale from an outcrop near Madison North CarolinaSee also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cow Branch Formation List of dinosaur bearing rock formations List of stratigraphic units with ornithischian tracks Indeterminate ornithischian tracksReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak Olsen Paul E Remington Charles L Cornet Bruce Thomson Keith S 1978 08 25 Cyclic Change in Late Triassic Lacustrine Communities Science 201 4357 729 733 doi 10 1126 science 201 4357 729 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 17750230 S2CID 23168710 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an Olsen Paul E Schlische Roy W Gore Pamela J W 1989 Tectonic Depositional and paleoecological history of Early Mesozoic rift basins eastern North America 28th International Geological Congress Field Trip Guidebook T351 PDF Washington D C American Geophysical Union pp 1 174 doi 10 1029 FT351 ISBN 0875906583 a b c d e f g h i j Liutkus C M Beard J S Fraser N C Ragland P C 2010 Use of fine scale stratigraphy and chemostratigraphy to evaluate conditions of deposition and preservation of a Triassic Lagerstatte south central Virginia Journal of Paleolimnology 44 2 645 666 Bibcode 2010JPall 44 645L doi 10 1007 s10933 010 9445 1 ISSN 0921 2728 S2CID 85464908 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Liutkus Pierce Cynthia M Fraser Nicholas C Heckert Andrew B 2014 Bailey Christopher M Coiner Lorrie V eds Stratigraphy sedimentology and paleontology of the Upper Triassic Solite Quarry North Carolina and Virginia Elevating Geoscience in the Southeastern United States New Ideas about Old Terranes Field Guides for the GSA Southeastern Section Meeting Blacksburg Virginia 2014 Geological Society of America pp 255 269 doi 10 1130 2014 0035 09 ISBN 978 0 8137 0035 9 retrieved 2023 12 18 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Olsen Paul E Reid Jeffrey C Taylor Kenneth B Whiteside Jessica H Kent Dennis V 2015 Revised stratigraphy of Late Triassic age strata of the Dan River Basin Virginia and North Carolina USA based on drill core and outcrop data Southeastern Geology 51 1 1 31 doi 10 7916 D82F7MSJ a b c d e f g h i Olsen Paul E 1979 A new aquatic Eosuchian from the Newark Supergroup Late Triassic Early Jurassic of North Carolina and Virginia PDF Postilla 176 1 14 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Olsen Paul E 1988 8 Paleoecology and Paleoenvironments of the Continental Early Mesozoic Newark Supergroup of Eastern North America PDF In Manspeizer Warren ed Triassic Jurassic Rifting and the Opening of the Atlantic Ocean Amsterdam Elsevier pp 185 230 doi 10 1016 B978 0 444 42903 2 50013 0 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au Fraser Nicholas C Grimaldi David A Olsen Paul E Axsmith Brian 1996 A Triassic Lagerstatte from eastern North America Nature 380 6575 615 619 Bibcode 1996Natur 380 615F doi 10 1038 380615a0 ISSN 0028 0836 S2CID 4360335 a b c Fraser Nicholas C Grimaldi David A 1999 A significant Late Triassic Lagerstaette from Virginia U S A PDF Revista del Museo Civico di Scienze Naturali Enrico Caffi 20 79 84 Fraser Nicholas C Grimaldi David A 2003 Late Triassic continental faunal change New perspectives on Triassic insect diversity as revealed by a locality in the Danville basin Virginia Newark Supergroup In LeTourneau 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Nicholas C Corso Taryn 2013 Lomax Barry ed A Triassic seed with an angiosperm like wind dispersal mechanism Palaeontology 56 5 1173 1177 Bibcode 2013Palgy 56 1173A doi 10 1111 pala 12049 ISSN 0031 0239 S2CID 128767475 Axsmith Brian J Taylor Thomas N 1997 The Triassic conifer seed cone Glyptolepis Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 96 1 2 71 79 Bibcode 1997RPaPa 96 71A doi 10 1016 S0034 6667 96 00050 4 Axsmith Brian J Andrews Felicia M Fraser Nicholas C 2004 The structure and phylogenetic significance of the conifer Pseudohirmerella delawarensis nov comb from the Upper Triassic of North America Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 129 4 251 263 Bibcode 2004RPaPa 129 251A doi 10 1016 j revpalbo 2004 02 005 ISSN 0034 6667 F H Knowlton 1919 A catalogue of the Mesozoic and Cenozoic plants of North America PDF USGS Bulletin 696 1 815 doi 10 3133 b696 Kustatscher Evelyn Van Konijnenburg Van Cittert Johanna H A 2011 08 01 The ferns of the Middle Triassic flora from Thale Germany Neues Jahrbuch fur Geologie und Palaontologie Abhandlungen 261 2 209 248 doi 10 1127 0077 7749 2011 0174 ISSN 0077 7749 Doweld Alexander B 2013 2246 2247 Proposals to conserve the names Todites against Acrostichites and Germaria and Pecopteris williamsonis Todites williamsonis against P curtata P hastata and P recentior fossil Pteridophyta Osmundopsida Taxon 62 6 1345 1346 doi 10 12705 626 33 ISSN 0040 0262 Bibliography edit Weishampel David B Peter Dodson and Halszka Osmolska eds 2004 The Dinosauria 2nd edition 1 880 Berkeley University of California Press Accessed 2019 02 21 ISBN 0 520 24209 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cow Branch Formation amp oldid 1195811371, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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