The non-marine Horseshoe Canyon Formation (HCFm, southern Alberta) yields taxonomically diverse, late Campanian to middle Maastrichtian dinosaur assemblages that play a central role in documenting dinosaur evolution, paleoecology, and paleobiogeography leading up to the end-Cretaceous extinction. Here, we present high-precision U–Pb CA–ID–TIMS ages and the first calibrated chronostratigraphy for the HCFm using zircon grains from (1) four HCFm bentonites distributed through 129 m of section, (2) one bentonite from the underlying Bearpaw Formation, and (3) a bentonite from the overlying Battle Formation that we dated previously. In its type area, the HCFm ranges in age from 73.1–68.0 Ma. Significant paleoenvironmental and climatic changes are recorded in the formation, including (1) a transition from a warm-and-wet deltaic setting to a cooler, seasonally wet-dry coastal plain at 71.5 Ma, (2) maximum transgression of the Drumheller Marine Tongue at 70.896 ± 0.048 Ma, and (3) transition to a warm-wet alluvial plain at 69.6 Ma. The HCFm’s three mega-herbivore dinosaur assemblage zones track these changes and are calibrated as follows: Edmontosaurus regalis – Pachyrhinosaurus canadensis zone, 73.1–71.5 Ma; Hypacrosaurus altispinus – Saurolophus osborni zone, 71.5–69.6 Ma; and Eotriceratops xerinsularis zone, 69.6–68.2 Ma. The Albertosaurus Bonebed — a monodominant assemblage of tyrannosaurids in the Tolman Member — is assessed an age of 70.1 Ma. The unusual triceratopsin, Eotriceratops xerinsularis, from the Carbon Member, is assessed an age of 68.8 Ma. This chronostratigraphy is useful for refining correlations with dinosaur-bearing upper Campanian–middle Maastrichtian units in Alberta and elsewhere in North America.
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Research Article|
October 09, 2019
High-precision U–Pb CA–ID–TIMS dating and chronostratigraphy of the dinosaur-rich Horseshoe Canyon Formation (Upper Cretaceous, Campanian–Maastrichtian), Red Deer River valley, Alberta, Canada
David A. Eberth;
a
Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology, P.O. Box 7500, Drumheller, Alberta T0J 0Y0, Canada.Corresponding author: David A. Eberth (email: [email protected]).
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Sandra L. Kamo
Sandra L. Kamo
b
Jack Satterly Geochronology Laboratory, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Toronto, 22 Russell St., Toronto, Ontario M5S 3B1, Canada.
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a
Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology, P.O. Box 7500, Drumheller, Alberta T0J 0Y0, Canada.
Sandra L. Kamo
b
Jack Satterly Geochronology Laboratory, Department of Earth Sciences, University of Toronto, 22 Russell St., Toronto, Ontario M5S 3B1, Canada.Corresponding author: David A. Eberth (email: [email protected]).
Publisher: Canadian Science Publishing
Received:
30 Jan 2019
Accepted:
09 Aug 2019
First Online:
05 Oct 2020
Online ISSN: 1480-3313
Print ISSN: 0008-4077
Published by NRC Research Press
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2020) 57 (10): 1220–1237.
Article history
Received:
30 Jan 2019
Accepted:
09 Aug 2019
First Online:
05 Oct 2020
Citation
David A. Eberth, Sandra L. Kamo; High-precision U–Pb CA–ID–TIMS dating and chronostratigraphy of the dinosaur-rich Horseshoe Canyon Formation (Upper Cretaceous, Campanian–Maastrichtian), Red Deer River valley, Alberta, Canada. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 2019;; 57 (10): 1220–1237. doi: https://doi.org/10.1139/cjes-2019-0019
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Index Terms/Descriptors
- absolute age
- Alberta
- Archosauria
- assemblages
- bentonite
- biostratigraphy
- Campanian
- Canada
- Chordata
- clastic rocks
- correlation
- Cretaceous
- Diapsida
- Dinosaur Provincial Park
- dinosaurs
- Drumheller Alberta
- Horseshoe Canyon Formation
- lithostratigraphy
- Maestrichtian
- Mesozoic
- nesosilicates
- orthosilicates
- Red Deer River valley
- Reptilia
- Saint Mary River Formation
- sedimentary rocks
- silicates
- stratigraphic boundary
- Tetrapoda
- U/Pb
- Upper Cretaceous
- Vertebrata
- Wapiti Formation
- Western Canada
- zircon
- zircon group
Latitude & Longitude
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