Lost Burro Formation
Appearance
Lost Burro Formation | |
---|---|
Stratigraphic range: Middle to Upper Devonian | |
Type | Geologic formation |
Underlies | Tin Mountain Limestone |
Overlies | Hidden Valley Dolomite |
Lithology | |
Primary | Dolomite |
Location | |
Coordinates | 36°20′39″N 116°30′41″W / 36.3443°N 116.5113°W |
Region | Mojave Desert California |
Country | United States |
Type section | |
Named for | Lost Burro Gap |
Named by | McAllister (1952) |
The Lost Burro Formation is a Middle to Upper/Late Devonian geologic formation in the Mojave Desert of California in the Western United States.
Geology
[edit]The Dolomite formation is exposed in sections of the Darwin Hills, the Santa Rosa Hills, the Talc City Hills, the Inyo Mountains near the Cerro Gordo Mines, the Panamint Range near Towne Pass, and the Argus Range. [1]
Fossils
[edit]Outcrops of the formation in Death Valley National Park have produced fossils of the placoderm Dunkleosteus terrelli, a small cladodont shark, the crushing tooth of a cochliodont, and the pteraspidid Blieckaspis priscillae.[2] [3]
References
[edit]- ^ Google Books: United States Geological Survey Professional Paper - "Geology and ore deposits of Inyo County, California"
- ^ "Death Valley National Park," Hunt, Santucci, and Kenworthy (2006); page 63.
- ^ Hunt, ReBecca K., Vincent L. Santucci and Jason Kenworthy. 2006. "A preliminary inventory of fossil fish from National Park Service units." in S.G. Lucas, J.A. Spielmann, P.M. Hester, J.P. Kenworthy, and V.L. Santucci (ed.s), Fossils from Federal Lands. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 34, pp. 63–69.
Categories:
- Devonian California
- Dolomite formations
- Upper Devonian Series
- Middle Devonian Series
- Death Valley National Park
- Geology of Inyo County, California
- Natural history of the Mojave Desert
- Inyo Mountains
- Panamint Range
- Devonian System of North America
- Geologic formations of California
- California geologic formation stubs