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Purgatoire Formation

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The Purgatoire Formation is an abandoned (1987) Cretaceous period geologic formation classification. The classification was used in Colorado , New Mexico , and Oklahoma , with mentions in older geologic literature in neighboring states.

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8-467: Units previously classified as members of the abandoned formation, including Lytle , Mesa Rica , Pajarito , Romeroville , and Glencairn , have been generally elevated to formation rank. Particularly, significant divisions of the Purgatoire classification, Lytle and Glencairn , were realized as having characteristics of formations in their own right as well as representing the greatest disconformity in

16-616: Is assigned formation rank within the Dakota Group . In south-central Colorado, the Lytle is an unassigned formation. The formation is also mapped in the valley of the Dry Cimarron in northeastern New Mexico , where it forms a prominent band in the lower parts of the cliffs. The Lytle was the last (youngest) non-marine unit to form in the Denver Basin before the region was fully inundated by

24-635: Is separated from the underlying Morrison Formation by a significant regional unconformity. It is overlain by the South Platte Formation or the Glencairn Formation . The formation is likely an early Cretaceous geologic unit, with its northern exposure running north and south within the Front Range foothills and the Dakota Hogback in northern Colorado and southern Wyoming where it

32-501: The Cretaceous period is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Lytle Formation The Lytle Formation or Lytle Sandstone is a geologic formation found in Wyoming , Colorado , and New Mexico . The Lytle Formation consists of white to light gray gravels and conglomerates. It is variable in thickness but is about 36 meters (118 ft) at the type location. It

40-510: The Raton Basin suggests a late Jurassic age for this unit. However, it is possible that the lack of younger zircons reflects a hiatus in deposition of airfall material. Known fossils are fragments of petrified wood eroded from the west as well as nondescript animal burrows, possibly Skolithos and Arenicolites . Body fossils are extremely rare, but a few ostracod and bivalve fossils are consistent with an Aptian to Albian age for

48-641: The Western Interior Seaway . It was formed above sea level from sediments carried by heavily laden rivers flowing from the eroding uplifts of the Sevier orogeny several tens of millions of years before the Rocky Mountains rose. It is particularly noted for abundant brown chert pebbles washed in from the uplifted Permian rock far to the west. Detrital zircon geochronology of the Lytle Formation in

56-588: The Lower Cretaceous sediments of the Western Interior Seaway . Rather than including these promoted formations in an elevated Purgatoire Group, the Mesa Rica, Pajarito, and Romeroville were placed in a definition of the Dakota Group local to the Dry Cimarron . This article about a specific stratigraphic formation in Colorado is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article related to

64-628: The formation. The formation was first named as the Lytle sandstone member of the Purgatoire Formation by G.I. Finlay in 1916, for exposures near Lytle, Colorado . Finlay found no fossils in the unit, but regarded it as likely early Cretaceous in age. Waage subsequently traced the unit into northeastern New Mexico and northern Colorado. Lytle, Colorado Lytle is a ghost town located 12 miles south-west of Fountain in El Paso County , Colorado . The only building that remains

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