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The Upper Triassic Chinle Formation and the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation preserve a record of lacustrine deposition along the western margin of tropical Pangaea and post-Pangaean North America. The lake deposits in these formations contain archives of sedimentary and geochemical paleoclimatic indicators, paleoeco-logical data, and characteristic stratal architecture that provide glimpses into the evolution of basins linked to global- and continental-scale tectonic events and processes, and the establishment of a mosaic of continental paleoecosystems. This field trip highlights the lacustrine and associated fluvial deposits of the Monitor Butte Member of the Chinle Formation and the Tidwell and Brushy Basin Members of the Morrison Formation in the southern part of the Colorado Plateau region, with emphases on: (1) sedimentary facies analysis and paleogeography of the paleolakes; (2) stratal architecture and high-frequency sequence stratigraphy; (3) recognition of lake basin-fill types; and (4) paleontology and ichnology of lake strata and their paleoecologic, paleohydrological, and paleoclimatic interpretation.

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