Coordinates: 78°42′N 81°54′W / 78.7°N 81.9°W / 78.7; -81.9

Margaret Formation

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Margaret Formation
Stratigraphic range: Wasatchian
54.3–50.7 Ma
TypeFormation
Unit ofEureka Sound Group
OverliesMount Moore Formation
Thickness140 m (460 ft)
Lithology
PrimarySandstone
OtherSiltstone, coal, tuff
Location
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Approximate paleocoordinatesLua error: callParserFunction: function "#coordinates" was not found.
RegionEllesmere Island, Northwest Territories, Nunavut
CountryCanada
ExtentSverdrup Basin
Margaret Formation (Canada)
Margaret Formation (Nunavut)

The Margaret Formation is a geologic formation of the Eureka Sound Group in the Sverdrup Basin in Northwest Territories and Nunavut, Canada. The unit belonging to the Eureka Sound Group which crops out at Ellesmere Island preserves fossils dating back to the Early Eocene period, or Wasatchian in the NALMA classification.[1]

The Margaret Formation comprises sandstones, sandy siltstones, clay-rich sandstones, coal seams and clay-rich coal seams and volcanic ash beds. The thickness of the formation, which overlies the Mount Moore Formation, reaches about 140 metres (460 ft). Radiometric dating of the formation provided ages of 52.6 ± 1.9 Ma (2010) and 53.7 ± 0.6 Ma (2017).

The area where the formation was deposited in the Early Eocene experienced a much warmer climate than the High Arctic today, with mean annual temperatures ranging from 7.6 to 12.9 °C (45.7 to 55.2 °F) and warmest month mean temperatures from 18.2 to 22.2 °C (64.8 to 72.0 °F). The deltaic to swamp environment of the Margaret Formation has provided a diverse fauna of various groups of mammals, birds (Presbyornis and Gastornis), reptiles (turtles, snakes, lizards and crocodiles) and fish.

Description

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The Margaret Formation comprises sandstones, sandy siltstones, clay-rich sandstones, coal seams and clay-rich coal seams and volcanic ash beds. The thickness of the formation, which overlies the Mount Moore Formation, reaches about 140 metres (460 ft).[2]

The formation was probably deposited in a lush proximal delta front to delta plain environment, with abundant channels and coal swamps.[3]

Dating

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A volcanic ash layer containing crandallite in the middle of the formation was dated using U-Pb radiometric dating in 2017 to 53.7 ± 0.6 Ma.[2] In 2010, ashes of the formation were dated to 52.6 ± 1.9 Ma.[4]

Arctic climate of the Early Eocene

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File:Early Eocene proxy ensemble data from fossil localities showing (a) MAT and (b) MAP estimates.png
Early Eocene proxy ensemble data from fossil localities showing (a) MAT and (b) MAP estimates with the Margaret Formation indicated with (3)

During the Early Eocene, the climate of much of northern North America was warm and wet, with mean annual temperatures (MAT) as high as 20 °C (68 °F), mean annual precipitation (MAP) of 100 to 150 centimetres (39 to 59 in), mild frost-free winters (coldest month mean temperature >5 °C (41 °F)), and climatic conditions that supported extensive temperate forest ecosystems.[5]

Ensemble estimates of mean annual temperatures for the high-latitude fossil localities in Arctic Canada ranged from 7.6 to 12.9 °C (45.7 to 55.2 °F), with the range of coldest month mean temperature from 1.3 to 4.2 °C (34.3 to 39.6 °F) and warmest month mean temperatures from 18.2 to 22.2 °C (64.8 to 72.0 °F). Mean annual precipitation estimates for the Margaret Formation ranged between 131 and 180 centimetres (52 and 71 in).[6] The mean summer precipitation has been estimated at 1,134 millimetres (44.6 in) and mean winter precipitation at 366 millimetres (14.4 in).[7]

The fossils and sedimentology indicate a lush, rain forest community on a coastal delta plain. Multiple palaeoclimate proxies, ranging from oxygen isotope analysis of vertebrate bones and teeth to palaeofloral analyses, estimate a mild temperate climate for the Eocene High Arctic, where winters remained at or just above freezing and summer temperatures extended to 20 °C (68 °F) or higher. These temperatures are a far cry from today's High Arctic, where central Ellesmere Island experiences a mean annual temperature of −19 °C (−2 °F), a warm month mean temperature of about 6 °C (43 °F) and a cold month mean temperature of −38 °C (−36 °F) or colder.[8]

Despite the mild Eocene Arctic climate, the vertebrate fauna would have experienced months of total darkness and cooler temperatures during the winter. Recent isotopic work suggests that some mammals, including the hippo-like Coryphodon, were year-round residents in the High Arctic. Given that Gastornis was large (approaching 2 metres (6.6 ft)) and flightless, it likely also was a year-round resident of the Arctic. In contrast, the volant Presbyornis might have been a seasonal migrant to the Arctic.[8]

Fossil content

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File:Palaeosinopa NT.jpg
Palaeosinopa
File:Knight Coryphodon.jpg
Coryphodon
File:Presbyornis Enhancement.jpg
Presbyornis
File:Gastornis.png
Gastornis
File:Allognathosuchus gracilis.jpg
Allognathosuchus

The formation has provided the following fossils:[1]

Mammals

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Primates
Acreodi
Carnivora
Dermoptera
Eutheria
Ferae
Glires
Hyaenodonta
Leptictida
Multituberculata
Pantodonta
Perissodactyla

Birds

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Anseriformes
Gastornithiformes

Reptiles

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Turtles
Crocodiles
Lizards
Snakes

Amphibians

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Caudata
Teleostei
Amiiformes
Lepisosteiformes

Correlations

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File:Correlation Margaret Formation.png
Correlation of the Margaret Formation with other Early Eocene formations in northern North America

The formation has been correlated with the Allenby Formation and Kamloops Group of British Columbia, the Chickaloon Formation of Alaska,[24] and with the Wishbone, Chuckanut and Iceberg Bay Formations.[25] The upper Margaret Formation also has been correlated with the Buchanan Lake Formation of the Eastern Arctic Archipelago.[26]

Wasatchian correlations in North America
Formation Wasatch DeBeque Claron Indian Meadows Pass Peak Tatman Willwood Golden Valley Coldwater Allenby Kamloops Ootsa Lake Margaret Nanjemoy Hatchetigbee Tetas de Cabra Hannold Hill Coalmont Cuchara Galisteo San Jose Ypresian (IUCS) • Itaboraian (SALMA)
Bumbanian (ALMA) • Mangaorapan (NZ)
Basin Powder River
Uinta
Piceance
Colorado Plateau
Wind River
Green River
Bighorn
Piceance




Colorado Plateau





Wind River





Green River






Bighorn
Williston Okanagan Princeton Buck Creek Nechako Sverdrup Potomac GoM Laguna Salada Rio Grande North Park Raton Galisteo San Juan
Country File:Flag of the United States (23px).png United States File:Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Canada File:Flag of the United States (23px).png United States File:Flag of Mexico.svg Mexico File:Flag of the United States (23px).png United States
Copelemur File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg
Coryphodon File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg
Diacodexis File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg
Homogalax File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg
Oxyaena File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg
Paramys File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg File:Orange pog.svg
Primates File:Brown pog.svg File:Brown pog.svg File:Brown pog.svg File:Brown pog.svg File:Brown pog.svg File:Brown pog.svg File:Brown pog.svg
Birds File:White pog.svg File:White pog.svg File:White pog.svg File:White pog.svg File:White pog.svg
Reptiles File:SpringGreen pog.svg File:SpringGreen pog.svg File:SpringGreen pog.svg File:SpringGreen pog.svg File:SpringGreen pog.svg File:SpringGreen pog.svg File:SpringGreen pog.svg
Fish File:Blue pog.svg File:Blue pog.svg File:Blue pog.svg File:Blue pog.svg File:Blue pog.svg File:Blue pog.svg File:Blue pog.svg
Insects File:Steel pog.svg File:Steel pog.svg File:Steel pog.svg File:Steel pog.svg File:Steel pog.svg File:Steel pog.svg
Flora File:Green pog.svg File:Green pog.svg File:Green pog.svg File:Green pog.svg File:Green pog.svg File:Green pog.svg File:Green pog.svg File:Green pog.svg File:Green pog.svg
Environments Alluvial-fluvio-lacustrine Fluvial Fluvial Fluvio-lacustrine Fluvial Lacustrine Fluvio-lacustrine Deltaic-paludal Shallow marine Fluvial Shallow marine Fluvial Fluvial
File:Pink ff0080 pog.svg Wasatchian volcanoclastics

File:Orange pog.svg Wasatchian fauna

Volcanic Yes No Yes No Yes No Yes No Yes No

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Margaret Formation at Fossilworks.org
  2. ^ a b Sudermann, 2017
  3. ^ Bay Fiord at Fossilworks.org
  4. ^ Reinhardt et al., 2010, p.2
  5. ^ West et al., 2020, p.1387
  6. ^ West et al., 2020, p.1394
  7. ^ Schubert et al., 2012, p.525
  8. ^ a b Stidham & Eberle, 2016, p.5
  9. ^ a b c West et al., 1977
  10. ^ a b c d Eberle & McKenna, 2002
  11. ^ a b c Eberle, 2001
  12. ^ Rose et al., 2004
  13. ^ McKenna, 1980
  14. ^ a b c d e Dawson, 2001
  15. ^ Dawson, 1990
  16. ^ a b Beard & Dawson, 2014
  17. ^ a b Alroy, 2002
  18. ^ Dawson, 2012
  19. ^ Eberle, 2005
  20. ^ a b Stidham & Eberle, 2016, p.3
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Estes & Hutchison, 1980
  22. ^ Alroy, 2006
  23. ^ Gardner, 2012
  24. ^ West et al., 2020, p.1390
  25. ^ West et al., 2020, p.1391
  26. ^ Eberle & Greenwood, 2012, p.6

Bibliography

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Geology and climate
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Paleontology
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