The DeBeque Formation is a geologic formation in Colorado's Piceance Basin,[1] preserving fossils which date back to the Late Paleocene to Early Eocene period (Clarkforkian to Wasatchian in the NALMA classification.[2][3] Examples of these fossils are held in the University of Colorado Museum of Natural History.[4]

DeBeque Formation
Stratigraphic range: Late Paleocene-Early Eocene (Clarkforkian-Wasatchian)
~56–50 Ma
Fossil from the DeBeque Formation
TypeFormation
Sub-unitsAtwell Gulch Member
Lithology
PrimaryClaystone
Location
Coordinates40°00′N 107°54′W / 40.0°N 107.9°W / 40.0; -107.9
Approximate paleocoordinates44°48′N 91°48′W / 44.8°N 91.8°W / 44.8; -91.8
Region Colorado
Country United States
DeBeque Formation is located in the United States
DeBeque Formation
DeBeque Formation (the United States)
DeBeque Formation is located in Colorado
DeBeque Formation
DeBeque Formation (Colorado)

Wasatchian correlations edit

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
DeBeque Formation (North America)
Country   United States   Canada   United States   Mexico   United States
Copelemur        
Coryphodon                    
Diacodexis              
Homogalax              
Oxyaena          
Paramys                  
Primates              
Birds          
Reptiles              
Fish              
Insects            
Flora                  
Environments Alluvial-fluvio-lacustrine Fluvial Fluvial Fluvio-lacustrine Fluvial Lacustrine Fluvio-lacustrine Deltaic-paludal Shallow marine Fluvial Shallow marine Fluvial Fluvial
  Wasatchian volcanoclastics

  Wasatchian fauna

  Wasatchian flora
Volcanic Yes No Yes No Yes No Yes No Yes No

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Bown & Kihm, 1981
  2. ^ DeBeque Formation at Fossilworks.org
  3. ^ Hirsch et al., 1997
  4. ^ "Collections". Museum of Natural History. 24 May 2016. Retrieved 10 November 2019.

Bibliography edit

  • Hirsch, Karl F.; Allen J. Kihm, and Darla K. Zelenitsky. 1997. New Eggshell of Ratite Morphotype with Predation Marks from the Eocene of Colorado. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 17(2). 360. . ISSN 0272-4634 JSTOR 4523812 doi:10.1080/02724634.1997.10010980
  • Bown, Thomas M., and Allen J. Kihm. 1981. Xenicohippus, an Unusual New Hyracotheriine (Mammalia, Perissodactyla) from Lower Eocene Rocks of Wyoming, Colorado and New Mexico. Journal of Paleontology 55(1). 257. . ISSN 0022-3360 JSTOR 1304347

Further reading edit

  • A. J. Lichtig and S. G. Lucas. 2015. Paleocene-Eocene turtles of the Piceance Creek Basin, Colorado. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 67:145-152
  • A. J. Kihm. 1984. Early Eocene Mammalian Fauna of the Piceance Creek Basin. Northwestern Colorado
  • K. P. Schmidt. 1938. New crocodilians from the upper Paleocene of western Colorado. Geological Series of Field Museum of Natural History 6(21):315-321