Kayenta_Formation

Kayenta Formation

Kayenta Formation

Jurassic sandstone formation of the southwestern United States


The Kayenta Formation is a geological formation in the Glen Canyon Group that is spread across the Colorado Plateau province of the United States, including northern Arizona, northwest Colorado, Nevada, and Utah. Traditionally has been suggested as Sinemurian-Pliensbachian, but more recent dating of detrital zircons has yielded a depositional age of 183.7 ± 2.7 Ma, thus a Pliensbachian-Toarcian age is more likely.[2] A previous depth work recovered a solid "Carixian" (Lower-Middle Pliensbachian) age from measurements done in the Tenney Canyon.[3] More recent works have provided varied datations for the layers, with samples from Colorado and Arizona suggesting 197.0±1.5-195.2±5.5 Ma (Middle Sinemurian), while the topmost section is likely Toarcian or close in age, maybe even recovering terrestrial deposits coeval with the Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event.[4] This last age asignation also correlated the Toarcian Vulcanism on the west Cordilleran Magmatic Arc, as the number of grains from this event correlate with the silt content in the sandstones of the upper layers.[4]

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Kayenta Formation west of Tuba City, Arizona.

This rock formation is particularly prominent in southeastern Utah, where it is seen in the main attractions of a number of national parks and monuments. These include Zion National Park, Capitol Reef National Park, the San Rafael Swell, and Canyonlands National Park.

The Kayenta Formation frequently appears as a thinner dark broken layer below Navajo Sandstone and above Wingate Sandstone (all three formations are in the same group). Together, these three formations can result in immense vertical cliffs of 2,000 feet (610 m) or more. Kayenta layers are typically red to brown in color, forming broken ledges.

Kayenta Formation in Utah

Southeast Utah

Redbeds including the Kayenta Formation and the Navajo Sandstone in Kolob Canyons, Zion National Park, Utah, USA
The Permian through Jurassic stratigraphy of the Colorado Plateau area of southeastern Utah that makes up much of the famous prominent rock formations in protected areas such as Capitol Reef National Park and Canyonlands National Park. From top to bottom: Rounded tan domes of the Navajo Sandstone, layered red Kayenta Formation, cliff-forming, vertically jointed, red Wingate Sandstone, slope-forming, purplish Chinle Formation, layered, lighter-red Moenkopi Formation, and white, layered Cutler Formation sandstone. Picture from Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, Utah.

In most sections that include all three geologic formations of the Glen Canyon group the Kayenta is easily recognized. Even at a distance it appears as a dark-red, maroon, or lavender band of thin-bedded material between two thick, massive, cross bedded strata of buff, tan, or light-red color. Its position is also generally marked by a topographic break. Its weak beds form a bench or platform developed by stripping the Navajo sandstone back from the face of the Wingate cliffs. The Kayenta is made up of beds of sandstone, shale, and limestone, all lenticular, uneven at their tops, and discontinuous within short distances. They suggest deposits made by shifting streams of fluctuating volume. The sandstone beds, from less than 1-inch (25 mm) to more than 10 feet (3.0 m) thick, are composed of relatively coarse, well-rounded quartz grains cemented by lime and iron. The thicker beds are indefinitely cross bedded. The shales are essentially fine-grained, very thin sandstones that include lime concretions and balls of consolidated mud. The limestone appears as solid gray-blue beds, a few inches to a few feet thick, and as lenses of limestone conglomerate. Most of the limestone lenses are less than 25 feet (7.6 m) long, but two were traced for nearly 500 feet (150 m) and one for 1,650 feet (500 m).

Viewed as a whole, the Kayenta is readily distinguished from the geologic formations above and below it. It is unlike them in composition, color, manner of bedding, and sedimentary history. Obviously the conditions of sedimentation changed in passing from the Wingate Sandstone formation to the Kayenta and from the Kayenta to the Navajo sandstone, but the nature and regional significance of the changes have not been determined. In some measured sections the transition from Wingate to Kayenta is gradual; the material in the basal Kayenta, beds seems to have been derived from the Wingate immediately below and redeposited with only the discordance characteristic of fluviatile sediments. But in many sections the contact between the two formations is unconformable; the basal Kayenta consists of conglomerate and lenticular sandstone that fills depressions eroded in the underlying beds. In Moqui Canyon near Red Cone Spring nearly 10 feet (3.0 m) of Kayenta limestone conglomerate rests in a long meandering valley cut in Wingate. Likewise, the contact between the Kayenta and the Navajo in places seems to be gradational, but generally a thin jumbled mass of sandstone and shales, chunks of shale and limestone, mud balls, and concretions of lime and iron, lies at the base of the fine-grained, cross bedded Navajo. Mud cracks, a few ripple marks, and incipient drainage channels were observed in the topmost bed of the Kayenta on Red Rock Plateau; and in west Glen Canyon, wide sand-filled cracks appear at the horizon. These features indicate that, in places at least, the Wingate and Kayenta were exposed to erosion before their overlying geologic formations were deposited, are it may be that the range in thickness of the Kayenta thus in part (is) accounted for.

Southwest Utah

The red and mauve Kayenta siltstones and sandstones that form the slopes at base of the Navajo Sandstone cliffs record the record of low to moderate energy streams. Poole (1997) has shown that the streams still flowed toward the east depositing from 150 to 210 m (500 to about 700 feet) of sediment here. The sedimentary structures showing the channel and flood plain deposits of streams are well exposed on switchbacks below the tunnel in Pine Creek Canyon.

In the southeastern part of Zion National Park a stratum of cross bedded sandstone is found roughly halfway between the top and bottom of the Kayenta Formation. It is a "tongue" of sandstone that merges with the Navajo formation east of Kanab, and it shows that desert conditions occurred briefly in this area during Kayenta time. This tongue is the ledge that shades the lower portion of the Emerald Pool Trail, and it is properly called Navajo, not Kayenta.

Fossil mudcracks attest to occasional seasonal climate, and thin limestones and fossilized trails of aquatic snails or worms mark the existence of ponds and lakes. The most interesting fossils, however, are the dinosaur tracks that are relatively common in Kayenta mudstone.

These vary in size, but all seem to be the tracks of three-toed reptiles that walked upright, leaving their tracks in the muds on the flood plains. Unfortunately, so far no bone materials have been found in Washington County that would enable more specific identification.

Apparently during Kayenta time Zion was situated in a climatic belt like that of Senegal with rainy summers and dry winters at the southern edge of a great desert. The influence of the desert was about to predominate, however, as North America drifted northward into the arid desert belt.

Glen Canyon

The Kayenta Formation is approximately 400 feet (120 m) thick and consists of a fine-grained sandstone interbedded with layers of siltstone. The alternation of these units generally produces a series of ledges and slopes between the cliffs of the Navajo and Moenave formation. Dinosaur tracks are fairly common in the siltstone, and fresh water mussels and snails occur but are rare. The Kayenta Formation is colored pale red and adds to the splendor of the Vermilion Cliffs. It accumulated as deposits of rivers.

Fossils

Color key
Taxon Reclassified taxon Taxon falsely reported as present Dubious taxon or junior synonym Ichnotaxon Ootaxon Morphotaxon
Notes
Uncertain or tentative taxa are in small text; crossed out taxa are discredited.

Invertebrates

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Fishes

The "Kayenta Fish Fauna" is the last one recovered from the Glen Canyon Group sequence and it is delimited mostly to the silty facies of the Lower-Middle Part of the formation.[8] This Fauna is rather scarce and delimited to several concrete locations with proper lacustrine or fluvial deposition, and are also scarce due to preservation bias.[8] Another aspect that can explain the lack of fish fossils found is the use of different research techniques than used on the Chinle Formation.[8]

Chondrichthyes

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Actinopterygii

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Sarcopterygii

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Amphibia

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Reptilia

Rhynchocephalia

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Testudinatans

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Crocodylomorphs

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Dinosauria

Indeterminate ornithischian remains located in Arizona, USA.[27] Ornithischian tracks located in Arizona, USA.[27] Indeterminate theropod remains located in Arizona, US.[27] Theropod tracks located in Arizona and Utah, US.[27] Possible theropod tracks located in Arizona, Colorado, and Utah, US.[27]

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Pterosauria

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Synapsida

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Ichnofossils

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Plants

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See also


Footnotes

  1. Weishampel, David B; et al. (2004). "Dinosaur distribution (Early Jurassic, North America)." In: Weishampel, David B.; Dodson, Peter; and Osmólska, Halszka (eds.): The Dinosauria, 2nd, Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 530–532. ISBN 0-520-24209-2.
  2. Marsh, A.D.; Rowe, T.; Simonetti, A.; Stockli, D.; Stockli, L. (2014). "The age of the Kayenta Formation of northeastern Arizona: overcoming the challenges of dating fossil bone". J. Vertebr. Paleontol. Prog. Abst. 34 (2): 178. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  3. Steiner, M.; Tanner, L.H. (2014). "Magnetostratigraphy and paleopoles of the Kayenta Formation and the Tenney Canyon Tongue" (PDF). Volumina Jurassica. 12: 31–38. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  4. Marsh, Adam Douglas (2018). "Contextualizing the evolution of theropod dinosaurs in western North America using U-Pb geochronology of the Chinle Formation and Kayenta Formation on the Colorado Plateau". doi:10.26153/tsw/41876. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  5. Kietzke, K.K.; Lucas, S.G. (1995). "Ostracoda and Gastropoda from the Kayenta Formation (Lower Jurassic) of Arizona, U.S.A". Journal of Arizona–Nevada Academy of Science. 28 (1–2): 23–32. JSTOR 40024298. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  6. Lewis, G. E.; Irwin, J. H.; Wilson, R. F. (1961). "Age of the Glen Canyon Group (Triassic and Jurassic) on the Colorado Plateau". Geological Society of America Bulletin. 72 (9): 1437–1440. Bibcode:1961GSAB...72.1437L. doi:10.1130/0016-7606(1961)72[1437:AOTGCG]2.0.CO;2. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
  7. Harshbarger, J.W.; Repenning, C.A.; Irwin, J.H. (1957). "Stratigraphy of the uppermost Triassic and the Jurassic rocks of the Navajo Country" (PDF). United States Geological Survey Professional Paper. 291 (1): 1–74. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
  8. Milner, A. R.; Kirkland, J. I.; Birthisel, T. A. (2006). "The geographic distribution and biostratigraphy of Late Triassic–Early Jurassic freshwater fish faunas of the southwestern United States". New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin. 37 (1): 522–529. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  9. Delsate, D.; Candoni, L. (2001). "Description de nouveaux morphotypes dentaires de Batomorphii toarciens (Jurassique inférieur) du Bassin de Paris: Archaeobatidae nov. fam". Bulletin-Société des Naturalistes Luxembourgeois. 102 (1): 131–143. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  10. Milner, A. R. C.; Birthisel, T. A.; Kirkland, J. I.; Breithaupt, B.H; Matthews, N. A.; Lockley, M. G.; Santucci, V. L.; Gibson, S. Z; DeBlieux, D. D.; Hurlbut, M.; Harris, J. D.; Olsen, P. E. (2011). "Tracking Early jurassic dinosaurs across southwestern Utah and the Triassic-Jurassic transition". Nevada State Museum Paleontological Papers. 1 (1): 1–107.
  11. Gay, R. J.; Milner, A. R. (2015). "The first report of an archosaur from the Kayenta Formation of Washington County, Utah" (PDF). PeerJ PrePrints. 1048 (1): 1–21. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  12. Milner, A. R.; Gay, R. J.; Irmis, R.; Overkamp, F.; Santella, M. (2017). "New southwestern Utah paleontological locality from the Lower Jurassic Kayenta Formation reveals a diverse vertebrate fauna based on teeth and tracks [abs.]". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 37 (1): 164.
  13. Milner, A. R.; Kirkland, J. I. (2006). "Preliminary review of the early Jurassic (Hettangian) freshwater Lake Dixie fish fauna in the Whitmore Point Member, Moenave Formation in southwest Utah". New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin. 37 (1–2): 510–521. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.537.1492.
  14. Frederickson, Joseph A; Cifelli, Richard L. (2017). "New Cretaceous lungfishes (Dipnoi, Ceratodontidae) from western North America". Journal of Paleontology. 91 (1): 146–161. doi:10.1017/jpa.2016.131. S2CID 131962612.
  15. Jenkins, F. A.; Walsh, D. M. (1993). "An Early Jurassic caecilian with limbs". Nature. 365 (2–4): 246–250. Bibcode:1993Natur.365..246J. doi:10.1038/365246a0. S2CID 4342438. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  16. Shubin, N. H.; Jenkins, F. A. (1995). "An early Jurassic jumping frog". Nature. 377 (6544): 49–52. Bibcode:1995Natur.377...49S. doi:10.1038/377049a0. S2CID 4308225. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  17. Simões, Tiago R.; Kinney-Broderick, Grace; E. Pierce, Stephanie (2022). "An exceptionally preserved Sphenodon-like sphenodontian reveals deep time conservation of the tuatara skeleton and ontogeny". Communications Biology. 5 (1): 195–208. doi:10.1038/s42003-022-03144-y. PMC 8894340. PMID 35241764. S2CID 247227560. Text was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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  19. Gafney, E.; Hutchinson, H.; Jenkins, F.; Meeker, L. (1987). "Modern turtle origins; the oldest known cryptodire". Science. 237 (2–5): 289–291. Bibcode:1987Sci...237..289G. doi:10.1126/science.237.4812.289. PMID 17772056. S2CID 36112523. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
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References


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