Revisiting the Cretaceous Mancos Group in Utah—problems, previous methods, and new perspectives on a world-class Cretaceous marine section

Authors

  • James I. Kirkland Utah Geological Survey
  • M. Ryan King Western Colorado University
  • Kevin G. Bylund

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31711/giw.v12.pp75-154

Abstract

The Mancos Group is an upper Cenomanian-middle Campanian lithostratigraphic unit that records large-scale changes in sedimentation patterns associated with the incursion of the Western Interior seaway
across western Colorado into central Utah. Understanding the stratigraphic relationships in this unit is of critical scientific importance to understanding marine stratigraphic sequences across the globe.
This field trip focuses on synonymizing units into consistent lithostratigraphic packages in the framework of biostratigraphy and currently available geochronology. Field trip stops emphasize the hierarchical
division of each Mancos unit, the information present/absent for correlation, and fossil occurrences and how they relate to paleoenvironment and index fauna, as well as disparate sedimentological characteristics
(grainsize, bioclastic content, glauconite abundance, cementation).

View to southeast toward the Henry Mountains from the Old Notom Road, 3190 S. (BLM 0086) across Morrison and Cedar Mountain Formations to characteristic double escarpment formed of the Mancos Group on the northern end of the Henry Mountains basin.

Published

2025-04-21

How to Cite

Revisiting the Cretaceous Mancos Group in Utah—problems, previous methods, and new perspectives on a world-class Cretaceous marine section. (2025). Geology of the Intermountain West, 12, 75-154. https://doi.org/10.31711/giw.v12.pp75-154

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