Soft-bodied fossil of a lizard from the Parachute Creek Member, Green River Formation (Eocene), Utah

Authors

  • Kenneth Carpenter Prehistoric Museum, Utah State University Eastern

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31711/giw.v5.pp263-269

Keywords:

Parachute Creek, Eocene, Green River, Fossil Lake, Lake Gosuite

Abstract

A rare specimen of soft tissue preservation of a lizard from the Parachute Creek Member of the Eocene Green River Formation, Uinta Basin, Utah, is described. The preservation is unusual in that it is a miner­alized body lacking the skeleton. This, and other small boneless vertebrate specimens also from the Para­chute Creek, indicate occasional demineralizing conditions in Lake Uinta, but not apparently in the other two lakes of the Green River Formation—Fossil Lake and Lake Gosuite.

Lizard preserved as a carbon film from the Parachute Creek Member of the Green River Formation (Eocene), Uinta Basin, Utah.

Published

2018-10-18

How to Cite

Soft-bodied fossil of a lizard from the Parachute Creek Member, Green River Formation (Eocene), Utah. (2018). Geology of the Intermountain West, 5, 263-269. https://doi.org/10.31711/giw.v5.pp263-269

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