scholarly journals Stratigraphic setting of fossil log sites in the Morrison Formation (Upper Jurassic) near Dinosaur National Monument, Uintah County, Utah, USA

2019 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 61-76
Author(s):  
Douglas A. Sprinkel ◽  
Mary Beth Bennis ◽  
Dale E. Gray ◽  
Carole T. Gee

The outcrop belt of the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation in the northeastern Uinta Basin and southeastern flank of the Uinta Mountains is particularly rich in dinosaurian and non-dinosaurian faunas, as well as in fossil plants. The discovery of several well-preserved, relatively intact, fossil logs at several locations in Rainbow Draw and one location in Miners Draw, both near Dinosaur National Monument (Utah), has provided an opportunity to study the local paleobotany, stratigraphy, and sedimentology of the Morrison Formation in northeastern Utah. The Morrison Formation in northeastern Utah consists of four members. In ascending chronostratigraphic order, they are the Windy Hill, Tidwell, Salt Wash, and Brushy Basin Members. The lithology (including the presenceof glauconite grains) and fossil assemblage of the lower two members (Windy Hill and Tidwell) indicate a marine to marginal marine (coastal plain) depositional environment, whereas the lithology, fossil flora and faunaassemblage of the upper two members (Salt Wash and Brushy Basin) indicate a fluvial–lacustrine depositional environment. At least 10 fossil log sites in Rainbow Draw have been documented so far, and geologic mapping indicates that the logs and wood all occur in the same stratigraphic interval within the Salt Wash Member, approximately 17 to 27 m above the base of the member. The unit containing the logs and wood is about 11 m thick and consists of very fine to fine-grained sandstone and siltstone with indistinct bedding and no discernible sedimentary features.The logs are siliceous, some have a coaly exterior, and they range in exposed length from 0.5 to 11 m and reach diameters up to 1.1 m. In the Miners Draw area, a single siliceous log is documented in the upper part of the Salt Wash Member within a silty sandstone unit that is 4 m thick; its exposed length is about 6 m. Although the correlation of the Miners Draw log-bearing interval to the interval in Rainbow Draw is uncertain, both units are lithologically similar and both occur in the upper part of the Salt Wash Member. The logs have been identified as araucariaceous conifers that pertain to the same taxon originally described as Araucarioxylon hoodii Tidwell et Medlyn 1993 from Mt. Ellen in the Henry Mountains of southern Utah. Concurrent systematic work will prompt a nomenclatural transfer of this species to the genus Agathoxylon. Based on the abundance of large fossil logs and wood in the same stratigraphic interval in Rainbow Draw, wehypothesize that the area was covered by stands of moderately large trees of araucariaceous conifers. The sedimentological evidence suggests that the trees were not transported far from their original site of growth before they were deposited in a low-energy floodplain environment.

2019 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 77-92 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carole Gee ◽  
Douglas Sprinkel ◽  
Mary Beth Bennis ◽  
Dale Gray

A new local flora of silicified logs and wood has been discovered in the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation in the Rainbow Draw area near Dinosaur National Monument, northeastern Utah, USA. Fossil logs and wood were found in the Salt Wash Member at nine sites at Rainbow Draw and at one site near Miners Draw, south of Blue Mountain. The fossil logs are large and relatively intact, the longest measuring 11 m. The wood is well preserved, coniferous, and can be identified to the species level. Diagnostic anatomical features include resin plugs in the ray cells and axial tracheids, araucarioid tracheary pitting and crossfield pitting, and the lack of resin canals and true, regularly occurring growth rings. This taxon of fossil wood, originally described as Araucarioxylon hoodii Tidwell et Medlyn, is recognized here as a new combination, Agathoxylon hoodii (Tidwell et Medlyn) Gee, Sprinkel, Bennis et Gray, which pertains to the conifer family Araucariaceae. Based on the preserved girth of the logs, the minimum height of the trees could be reconstructed. The largest fossil logs measured at least 127 cm in diameter and hence reached a minimum height of 28 m. Judging from the growth habit of all naturally occurring araucariaceous trees today, the fossil plants likely formed forests of moderately tall trees and were well over 100 years old. The lack of true growth rings shows that there was no seasonality in the local paleoclimate, neither variations in summer–winter temperatures, nor wet–dry cycles. Thus, during the Late Jurassic, tall conifer forests with Agathoxylon hoodii grew in at least two areas in what is now Utah: east of the city of Vernal and near Mt. Ellen in the Henry Mountains. Coupled with the fossil evidence of conifer seed cones and pollen found in the Morrison Formation throughout eastern Utah, the newly discovered fossil logs and wood argue for the reconstruction of Upper Jurassic habitats in this region as mesic and wooded, and the climate as equable, not seasonal, nor semi-arid or arid.


2019 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 61-76 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas Sprinkel ◽  
Mary Beth Bennis ◽  
Dale Gray ◽  
Carole Gee

The outcrop belt of the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation in the northeastern Uinta Basin and southeastern flank of the Uinta Mountains is particularly rich in dinosaurian and non-dinosaurian faunas, as well as in fossil plants. The discovery of several well-preserved, relatively intact, fossil logs at several locations in Rainbow Draw and one location in Miners Draw, both near Dinosaur National Monument (Utah), has provided an opportunity to study the local paleobotany, stratigraphy, and sedimentology of the Morrison Formation in northeastern Utah.


Author(s):  
Christine Turner ◽  
Fred Peterson

The objective of this study is to establish a stratigraphic, sedimentologic, and geochronologic framework of the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation within Dinosaur National Monument, and to tie this framework to the rest of the Colorado Plateau and other important fossil-bearing localities. The study is designed to complement ongoing paleontological inventories of the Morrison Formation within the Monument. During the first field season, emphasis was placed on beginning detailed stratigraphic and sedimentologic work and the collection of samples for various types of analyses.


Author(s):  
Christine Turner ◽  
Fred Peterson

The overall goal of this study is to establish a stratigraphic, sedimentologic, and geochronologic framework for the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation within Dinosaur National Monument and to tie that framework to the rest of the Colorado Plateau and other important vertebrate fossil-bearing localities in the western United States. The study is also intended to complement ongoing paleontological inventories of the Morrison Formation within Dinosaur National Monument (DNM).


Author(s):  
Christine Turner ◽  
Fred Peterson

The objective of this study is to establish a stratigraphic, sedimentologic, and geochronologic framework of the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation within Dinosaur National Monument (DNM) and to tie this framework to the rest of the Colorado Plateau and other important fossil-bearing localities in the Western Interior of the U.S. The study is also designed to complement ongoing paleontological inventories of the Morrison Formation within the Monument. During the 1990 field season emphasis was placed on the larger aspects of stratigraphic and sedimentologic work and collection of samples for various types of analyses. Work during the 1991 field season was concentrated on detailed stratigraphic and sedimentologic studies of the quarry interval and on the regional studies that will relate the Morrison Formation at DNM and its contained bones to important bone-bearing localities elsewhere in the Western Interior of the U.S.


1990 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 34-40 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Chure ◽  
John McIntosh

Discovered in 1909 by Earl Douglass of the Carnegie Museum, the Dinosaur Quarry (DQ) at Dinosaur National Monument has proven to be one of our best windows into the large vertebrate community of the Morrison Formation (Upper Jurassic). To date, the remains of several hundred individuals belonging to sixteen species of dinosaurs and other vertebrates have been found. The DQ has produced more species, skulls, juveniles, and complete skeletons than any other Morrison Formation quarry. Between 1909 and 1924, the DQ was actively quarried and over 700,000 lbs. of fossils were collected. In 1958 the National Park Service enclosed the unexcavated area of the DQ within a building with both exhibits and research facilities. Since that time over 2,000 bones have been uncovered and left in situ, just as they were deposited. The concept of an enclosed quarry with an in situ exhibit of fossils has been successfully followed at a number of parks both within the U.S. and abroad.


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