Cloverly Formation
| Cloverly Formation | |
|---|---|
| Stratigraphic range: | |
| File:Cloverly Fm.jpg Brightly colored strata of the Himes Member of the Cloverly Formation near Shell, Wyoming | |
| Type | Geological formation |
| Sub-units | Pryor Conglomerate, Little Sheep Member, Himes Member |
| Underlies | Thermopolis Shale |
| Overlies | Morrison Formation |
| Thickness | 150β400 ft (46β122 m) |
| Lithology | |
| Primary | Mudstone |
| Other | Conglomerate, sandstone |
| Location | |
| Region | Wyoming, Montana, Colorado, Utah |
| Country | United States |
| Type section | |
| Named for | Cloverly post office, Wyoming |
| Named by | Nelson Horatio Darton, 1904[1] |
The Cloverly Formation is a geological formation of Early and Late Cretaceous age (Valanginian to Cenomanian stage) that is present in parts of Montana, Wyoming, Colorado and Utah in the western United States. It was named for a post office on the eastern side of the Bighorn Basin in Wyoming by N.H. Darton in 1904.[1][2] The sedimentary rocks of formation were deposited in floodplain environments and contain vertebrate fossils, including a diverse assemblage of dinosaur remains. In 1973, the Cloverly Formation Site was designated as a National Natural Landmark by the National Park Service.[3]
Stratigraphy
[edit | edit source]The Cloverly Formation rests disconformably on the Morrison Formation and is conformably overlain by the Thermopolis Shale. It is subdivided into a variety of members, depending on the location.[2][4] In the Bighorn Basin along the Montana-Wyoming border, Moberly (1960) divided the Cloverly into the following three members:
- The Pryor Conglomerate lies at the base and contains abundant black chert. It is named from thick beds exposed on the west side of the Pryor Mountains.
- The Little Sheep Member lies in the middle and is composed of pale-purple, gray to almost white, bentonitic mudstone.
- The uppermost unit is the Himes Member, which contains some coarse-grained channel sandstone deposits, but consists primarily of brightly multicolored (variegated) mudstones.
In contrast, Ostrom (1970) divided the formation into four units, which he named Units IV-VII:
- Unit IV equates to the Pryor Conglomerate of Moberly and consists of a conglomerate or conglomeratic sandstone.
- Unit V, overlaying Unit IV, consists of a lower grey-to-purple claystone with abundant fist-sized chalcedony and barite concretions; the unit is highly bentonitic and contains occasional channel sands.
- Unit VI is a discontinuous "salt and pepper" cross-stratified channel sandstone with occasional conglomerate, considered by Moberly to be part of the Himes Member.
- Unit VII, the uppermost, is a maroon to orange claystone with occasional highly rounded and polished pebbles of silica.[5]
Age
[edit | edit source]A stratigraphic revision of the Cloverly Formation using new uranium lead dates reinterpret the formation as spanning the Valanginian-Cenomanian stages of the Cretaceous period. The individual ages of the members are listed below:[6]
- Pryor Conglomerate; 140-130 Ma (Valanginian-Hauterivian)
- Little Sheep Member; 130-124 Ma (marine section) (Hauterivian-Barremian) and 124-109 Ma (terrestrial section) (Barremian-Albian)
- Himes Member; 109-98 Ma (Albian-Cenomanian)
Depositional environment
[edit | edit source]The sediments of the Cloverly Formation were deposited in alluvial and floodplain environments. The basal conglomerates probably represent braided river deposits, while the sandstones were deposited in fluvial channels. The mudstones that contain most of the fossils represent overbank, lacustrine, and pedogenic deposits.[2][4][7]
Vertebrate fauna
[edit | edit source]Animals recovered include the dinosaurs Deinonychus, Microvenator, Tenontosaurus, Zephyrosaurus and Sauropelta as well as fragmentary remains of Titanosaurs, Ankylosaurs and Ornithomimids. As well, two genera of turtle Naomichelys and Glyptops and the lungfish Ceratodus.[8] Dinosaur eggs have been found in Montana.[9]
References for data: Ostrom 1970; Cifelli et al. 1998; Cifelli 1999; Nydam and Cifelli 2002. Possible goniopholidid remains are known from the formation.
Dinosaurs
[edit | edit source]Ornithischians
[edit | edit source]Ankylosaurs
[edit | edit source]| Ankylosaurs reported from the Cloverly Formation | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | Species | State | Stratigraphic position | Material | Notes | Images |
|
S. edwardsorum[10] |
Cloverly V; Little Sheep Mudstone Member[11][12] |
Known from "several articulated skeletons" and common armor plates.[10] Only one partial skull is known.[13] |
Articulated skeletons are often encased in carbonate caliche deposits that require acid to be removed safely.[10] |
|||
| Tatankacephalus[14] | T. cooneyorum[14] |
|
Cloverly VII[14] | Partial cranium, rib fragments, and osteoderms.[14] | Originally described as an ankylosaurid but has since been reclassified as a nodosaurid.[15] | |
Ceratopsians
[edit | edit source]| Ceratopsians reported from the Cloverly Formation | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | Species | State | Stratigraphic position | Material | Notes | Images |
|
A. americanus |
|
Cloverly VII; Himes Member[16] |
A basal neoceratopsian. |
| ||
Ornithopods
[edit | edit source]| Ornithopods reported from the Cloverly Formation | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | Species | State | Stratigraphic position | Material | Notes | Images |
|
T. tilleti[10] |
Its remains are the most common of any dinosaur of the formation.[10] |
Juvenile remains are sometimes found together, suggesting that young Tenontosaurus lived in sibling groups. Deinonychus teeth are sometimes associated with Tenontosaurus, suggesting a predator-prey relationship between the two.[10] |
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|
Z. schaffi[10] |
|
Himes Member |
Its remains are "very rare."[10] |
An orodromine ornithopod. | ||
Saurischians
[edit | edit source]Theropod eggshell fragments are known from the formation. Unidentifiable ornithomimid remains are present and most commonly represented by toe bones.[10] Indeterminate allosauroid remains are known from the formation. Remains identified by John Ostrom as Ornithomimus are suspected by Jack Horner to be of a new ornithomimid genus.[10] Possible remains of a microraptorian, a troodontid, and a basal tyrannosauroid similar to Moros have also been found here as well.
Color key
|
Notes Uncertain or tentative taxa are in small text; |
Sauropods
[edit | edit source]| Sauropods reported from the Cloverly Formation | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | Species | State | Stratigraphic position | Material | Notes | Images |
|
R. cooneyi[18] |
|
Cloverly VII; Himes Member[18] | A partial skeleton consisting of 18 caudal vertebrae and associated material, including an isolated neural arch, tooth, chevron, and distal section of a metacarpal. | A dubious specimen of a titanosauriformes | ||
| Sauroposeidon[19] | S. proteles |
|
Cloverly VII; Himes Member[20] | |||
Theropods
[edit | edit source]| Theropods reported from the Cloverly Formation | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | Species | State | Stratigraphic position | Material | Notes | Images | |
| Acrocanthosaurus[20] | A. atokensis[20] |
|
Cloverly VII; Himes Member[20] | A partial skeleton consists of a dorsal vertebral centrum, caudal vertebral neural arch, right and left pubes, right femur, proximal right fibula, and several fragments. | A carcharodontosaurid. | ||
|
D. antirrhopus[10] |
Its remains are "very rare."[10] |
A dromaeosaur. Tenontosaurus remains have been recovered in association with Deinonychus teeth, suggesting a predator-prey relationship between the two.[10] | |||||
|
M. celer[10] |
Himes Member |
Its remains are "extremely rare."[10] Known only from a "[p]artial skeleton with partial skull."[21] The specimen lacks feet and is catalogued as AMNH 3041.[22] |
The type specimen AMNH 3041[10] was recovered by Barnum Brown from Cloverly strata in Montana in 1933. |
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|
O. velox[23] |
Later found to be indeterminate ornithomimid remains.[23] | ||||||
Mammals
[edit | edit source]| Mammals reported from the Cloverly Formation | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | Species | State | Stratigraphic position | Material | Notes | Images |
|
A. sp.[24] |
Previously referred as "Cloverly triconodont" | |||||
|
cf. Atokatheridium |
Indeterminate | |||||
|
B. sp. |
||||||
|
C. montanensis |
||||||
|
G. ostromi |
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|
J. sp. |
||||||
|
M. keeblerorum |
||||||
|
cf. Oklatheridium |
Indeterminate | |||||
|
cf. Paracimexomys |
Indeterminate |
|||||
| Spalacotheriidae | Indeterminate | |||||
Crocodyliforms
[edit | edit source]| Crocodyliforms reported from the Cloverly Formation | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | Species | State | Stratigraphic position | Material | Notes | |
|
cf. Atoposauridae |
Indeterminate | |||||
|
cf. Bernissartidae |
Indeterminate | |||||
|
cf. Goniopholididae |
Indeterminate |
|||||
|
cf. Pholidosauridae |
Indeterminate | |||||
Turtles
[edit | edit source]| Turtles reported from the Cloverly Formation | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | Species | State | Stratigraphic position | Material | Notes | |
| Indeterminate | ||||||
|
"G". pervicax[10] |
||||||
|
N. speciosa[10] |
||||||
| Indeterminate | ||||||
Lepidosaurs
[edit | edit source]| Lepidosaurs reported from the Cloverly Formation | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | Species | State | Stratigraphic position | Material | Notes | |
|
P. keebleri |
||||||
| Indeterminate | ||||||
|
P. wilsoni |
Also known from the Antlers Formation | |||||
| Indeterminate | ||||||
Amphibians
[edit | edit source]| Amphibians reported from the Cloverly Formation | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | Species | State | Stratigraphic position | Material | Notes | Images |
|
A. ektopistikon[25] |
| |||||
| Anura |
Indeterminate |
|||||
| Batrachosauroididae |
Indeterminate |
|||||
|
O. nodos[26] |
||||||
|
Indeterminate |
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|
cf. Scotiophryne |
Indeterminate |
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Bony fish
[edit | edit source]| Osteichthyes reported from the Cloverly Formation | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | Species | State | Stratigraphic position | Material | Notes | Images |
|
C. frazieri[10] |
| |||||
|
C. nirumbee[27] |
||||||
|
aff. Lepidotes |
Indeterminate |
|||||
|
aff. Pycnodontidae |
Indeterminate |
|||||
|
Indeterminate |
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Cartilaginous fish
[edit | edit source]| Chondrichthyes reported from the Cloverly Formation | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | Species | State | Stratigraphic position | Material | Notes | |
|
E. sp. |
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| H. parvidens | ||||||
|
L. sp. |
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| P. sp. | ||||||
| P. sp. | ||||||
See also
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Footnotes
[edit | edit source]- ^ a b Darton, N.H. 1904. Comparison of the stratigraphy of the Black Hills, Bighorn Mountains, and Rocky Mountain Front Range. Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 15, p. 379-448.
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- ^ a b Moberly, R.M., Jr., 1960, Morrison, Cloverly, and Sykes Mountain formations, northern Bighorn basin, Wyoming and Montana: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 71, no. 8, p. 1137-1176.
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- ^ May, M.T. 1992. Intra- and extrabasinal tectonism, climate and intrinsic threshold cycles as possible controls on Early Cretaceous fluvial architecture, Wind River basin, Wyoming. In: Sundell, K.A., and Anderson, T.C., eds., Rediscover the Rockies: Wyoming Geological Association Field Conference Guidebook, 43rd Annual Field Conference, Casper, WY, September 12β19, 1992, no. 43, p. 61-74.
- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
- ^ a b "3.11 Montana, United States; 1. Cloverly Formation," in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 556.
- ^ 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 Horner. Pp. 93-100.
- ^ Kirkland, James I.; Britt, Brooks; Burge, Donald L.; Carpenter, Kenneth; Cifelli, Richard; DeCourten, Frank; Eaton, Jeffrey; Hasiotis, Steven; Lawton, Timothy (1997). "Lower to Middle Cretaceous Dinosaur faunas of the central Colorado Plateau: a key to understanding 35 million years of tectonics, sedimentology, evolution, and biogeography". Brigham Young University Geology Studies. 42 (II): 69β103.
- ^ Ostrom, John H. (1970). Stratigraphy and paleontology of the cloverly formation (Lower Cretaceous) of the Bighorn Basin Area, Wyoming and Montana. Peabody Mus. of Nat. History, Univ. OCLC 258060311.
- ^ "Table 17.1," in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 365.
- ^ a b c d e Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
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- ^ a b Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
- ^ a b c d "3.12 Wyoming, United States; 2. Cloverly Formation," in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 556.
- ^ a b c d Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
- ^ D'Emic, M.D., and B.Z. Foreman. (2012). The beginning of the sauropod dinosaur hiatus in North America: insights from Wyoming's Lower Cretaceous Cloverly Formation. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 32(4):883β902.
- ^ a b c d e f Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
- ^ "Table 8.1," in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 167.
- ^ "Table 5.1," in Varricchio (2001). Page 44.
- ^ a b c "3.11 Wyoming, United States; 1. Cloverly Formation" and "3.12 Montana, United States; 2. Cloverly Formation," in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 556.
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- ^ Frederickson J.A. and Cifelli R.L. (2016) New Cretaceous lungfishes (Dipnoi, Ceratodontidae) from western North America. Journal of Paleontology.
References
[edit | edit source]- Burton, D., Greenhalgh, B.W., Britt, B.B., Kowallis, B.J., Elliott, W.S., and Barrick, R. 2006. New radiometric ages from the Cedar Mountain Formation, Utah and the Cloverly Formation, Wyoming: implications for contained dinosaur faunas. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs 38(7): 52.
- Chen, Z.-Q. and Lubin, S. 1997. A fission track study of the terrigenous sedimentary sequences of the Morrison and Cloverly Formations in northeastern Bighorn Basin, Wyoming. The Mountain Geologist 34:51-62.
- Cifelli, R.L. 1999. Tribosphenic mammal from the North American Early Cretaceous. Nature 401:363-366.
- Cifelli, R.L., Wible, J.R., and Jenkins, F.A. 1998. Triconodont mammals from the Cloverly Formation (Lower Cretaceous), Montana and Wyoming. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 18: 237-241.
- Horner, John R. Dinosaurs Under the Big Sky (Cloverly Formation). Mountain Press Publishing Company. pp. 93β100. Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value)..
- Nydam, R.L., and Cifelli, R.L. 2002. Lizards from the Lower Cretaceous (Aptian-Albian) Antlers and Cloverly Formations. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 22: 286-298.
- Ostrom, J. H. 1970. Stratigraphy and paleontology of the Cloverly Formation (Lower Cretaceous) of the Bighorn Basin area, Wyoming and Montana. Peabody Museum Bulletin 35:1-234
- Varricchio, D. J. 2001. Late Cretaceous oviraptorosaur (Theropoda) dinosaurs from Montana. pp. 42β57 in D. H. Tanke and K. Carpenter (eds.), Mesozoic Vertebrate Life. Indiana University Press, Indianapolis, Indiana.
- Weishampel, David B.; Dodson, Peter; and OsmΓ³lska, Halszka (eds.): The Dinosauria, 2nd, Berkeley: University of California Press. 861 pp. Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value)..
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- Cloverly Formation
- Geologic formations of Colorado
- Geologic formations of Montana
- Geologic formations of Wyoming
- Geologic formations of Utah
- Lower Cretaceous Series of North America
- Cretaceous Colorado
- Cretaceous Montana
- Cretaceous geology of Wyoming
- Cretaceous geology of Utah
- Aptian Stage
- Albian Stage
- Mudstone formations of the United States
- Conglomerate formations of the United States
- Sandstone formations of the United States
- Fluvial deposits
- Lacustrine deposits
- Fossiliferous stratigraphic units of North America
- Paleontology in Montana
- Paleontology in Wyoming
- Geology of the Rocky Mountains
- National Natural Landmarks in Montana