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San Jose Formation

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A geologic formation in New Mexico

For other uses, see San José Formation.
San Jose Formation
Stratigraphic range: Wasatchian
~55.8–50 Ma PreꞒ O S D C P T J K Pg N
San Jose Formation capping Mesa de Cuba, northern New Mexico
TypeFormation
Sub-unitsCuba Mesa, Ditch Canyon, Llaves, Regina & Tapicitos Members
OverliesNacimiento Formation
Thickness430 m (1,410 ft)
Lithology
PrimarySandstone
OtherShale
Location
Coordinates36°17′N 107°04′W / 36.29°N 107.06°W / 36.29; -107.06
Approximate paleocoordinates41°12′N 91°42′W / 41.2°N 91.7°W / 41.2; -91.7
RegionNew Mexico
Country United States
ExtentSan Juan Basin
Type section
Named forSan Jose Valley (36°10′48″N 106°55′37″W / 36.180°N 106.927°W / 36.180; -106.927)
Named byG.G. Simpson
Year defined1948
San Jose Formation is located in the United StatesSan Jose FormationSan Jose Formation (the United States)Show map of the United StatesSan Jose Formation is located in New MexicoSan Jose FormationSan Jose Formation (New Mexico)Show map of New Mexico

The San Jose Formation is an Early Eocene (Wasatchian in the NALMA classification) geologic formation in the San Juan Basin of New Mexico and Colorado.

Description

Road cut in the San Jose Formation, near Cuba, New Mexico

The San Jose Formation is mostly sandstone but with some mudstone beds. The formation was deposited by high-energy streams on a muddy floodplain that was the last preserved sedimentation episode in the San Juan Basin. Stream direction was from the northwest, north, and east towards the south.

The basal Cuba Mesa Member is found throughout the depositional basin and is a coarse-grained sheet sandstone. The Regina Member is floodplain mudstone and disconnected sheet sandstone that intertongues with the sandstone-dominated Ditch Canyon Member in the northwestern part of the basin and the Llaves Member on the east side of the basin. The uppermost member is the siltstone-dominated Tapicitos Member. The Cuba Mesa Member was deposited during subsidence in the basin center, while the later members were deposited during episodes of monoclinal folding along the Nacimiento Fault on the west escarpment of the Nacimiento Mountains.

Paleontology

The mudstone beds of the San Jose Formation are locally rich in fossils. These include the Almagre and Largo faunas of the early Eocene.

Fossil content

Among others, the following fossils have been reported from the formation:

Mammals

Primates
Artiodactyls
Carnivora
Cimolesta
Ferae
Glires
Hyaenodonta
Insectivora
Pantodonta
Perissodactyla
Placentalia
Taeniodonta
Theriiformes

Reptiles

Snakes
Turtles
Lizards

History of investigation

In late 1874, Edward Drinker Cope was a member of the Wheeler Survey but ignored orders from Wheeler to proceed north from the Chama River to Colorado. Instead, he headed south to explore the area north of the San Pedro Mountains, where fossils had been reported. He found early Eocene fossils in the badlands north of Regina, New Mexico and spent about seven weeks collecting fishes, reptiles, and what was then the oldest known mammal fossils in North America. He also collected the fossil of a giant flightless bird. Cope later wrote his father that this was "the most important find in geology I have ever made".

In 1948, G.G. Simpson visited the same area and assigned the fossil beds to the San Jose Formation. In 1967, the formation was divided (in ascending order) into the Cuba Mesa Member, Regina Member, Llaves Member, and Tapicitos Member.

See also

References

  1. ^ San Jose Formation at Fossilworks.org
  2. ^ Simpson 1948a.
  3. Simpson 1948b.
  4. ^ Smith 1992.
  5. ^ Baltz 1967.
  6. Gingerich & Simons 1977.
  7. ^ Lucas, Schoch & Manning 1981.
  8. ^ Alroy 2002.
  9. ^ Beard 1987.
  10. ^ Krishtalka & Stucky 1986.
  11. Denison 1938.
  12. Korth 1984.
  13. Flanagan 1986.
  14. Bown & Schankler 1982.
  15. ^ Froehlich 2002.
  16. ^ Redline 1997.
  17. ^ Simpson 1951.
  18. Williamson & Lucas 1992.
  19. Schoch 1986.
  20. ^ Sullivan & Lucas 1988.
  21. ^ Lichtig & Lucas 2015.
  22. Hay 1904.
  23. Cope 1875.
  24. ^ Lichtig, Hutchison & Lucas 2018.
  25. Osborn 1978.
  26. Kues, Lewis & Lueth 2014.

Bibliography

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