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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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San Juan Basin (2)
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United States
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Colorado Plateau (2)
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New Mexico
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McKinley County New Mexico (2)
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Rio Arriba County New Mexico (2)
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San Juan County New Mexico (2)
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Sandoval County New Mexico (3)
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fossils
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Chordata
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Tetrapoda
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Reptilia
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microfossils (1)
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palynomorphs
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lower Paleocene
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Cretaceous
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Fruitland Formation (1)
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Ojo Alamo Sandstone (1)
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Primary terms
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Cenozoic
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lower Paleocene
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Chordata
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dinosaurs (2)
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Mesozoic
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Cretaceous
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Upper Cretaceous
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Fruitland Formation (1)
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Ojo Alamo Sandstone (1)
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stratigraphy (2)
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United States
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Colorado Plateau (2)
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New Mexico
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McKinley County New Mexico (2)
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Rio Arriba County New Mexico (2)
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San Juan County New Mexico (2)
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Sandoval County New Mexico (3)
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sedimentary rocks
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sedimentary rocks
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clastic rocks
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conglomerate (1)
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Dinosaurs, pollen and spores, and the age of the Ojo Alamo Sandstone, San Juan Basin, New Mexico
The Ojo Alamo Sandstone of the San Juan Basin of New Mexico is composed of interbedded conglomeratic sandstone, sandstone, siltstone, and mudstone. Conglomerates are found in the western part of the basin; siliceous pebbles diminish in size both southward and eastward across the basin, becoming rare to nonexistent in the eastern part. There is great variation in the internal stratigraphy of the Ojo Alamo: Individual sandstone or mudstone beds thicken, thin, and pinch out laterally. The thickness of the Ojo Alamo varies from 6 m (20 ft) to more than 122 m (400 ft). The formation varies in composition from one to as many as five sandstone beds with interbeds of siltstone or mudstone. Dinosaur bone has been found within the Ojo Alamo at several sites in the western part of the basin. Paleocene pollen has been found within the Ojo Alamo in the eastern part of the basin. To date, no Cretaceous pollen has been found at or above the stratigraphic level of dinosaur bone within the Ojo Alamo Sandstone. Near Barrel Spring, in the southwest part of the basin, both dinosaur bone and Paleocene pollen have been found. One bone, found at the top of the Ojo Alamo, was loose on the surface, and its significance is therefore equivocal. Dinosaur bone, however, has also been found in place in the upper part of the Ojo Alamo about 1.6 km (1 mi) west of Barrel Spring, at about the same stratigraphic level as Paleocene pollen from a site just east of Barrel Spring. Because there is no apparent unconformity between the highest in-place bone level and the Paleocene pollen level in this area, the Ojo Alamo dinosaurs, if not reworked, are Paleocene in age at this site and probably throughout the San Juan Basin.
Dinosaurs from the Upper Cretaceous Fruitland Formation and Kirtland Shale in the San Juan Basin, New Mexico, pertain to the following taxa: Ornithomimidae, cf. Ornithomimus edmonticus , cf. Struthiomimus altus , Dromaeosauridae, Albertosaurus sp., cf. Tyrannosaurus rex , Alamosaurus sanjuanensis , ?Pachycephalosauridae, Ankylosauria, Ankylosauridae, Nodosauridae, ? Euoplocephalus sp., ? Panoplosaurus sp., Hadrosauridae, Kritosaurus navajovius , Parasaurolophus tubicen , P. cyrtocristatus , Ceratopsidae, cf. Chasmosaurus sp., Pentaceratops sternbergii , P. fenestratus , and Torosaurus cf. T. utahensis. The dinosaur fauna of the Fruitland Formation is temporally equivalent to the dinosaur faunas of the Judith River (Montana) and Oldman (Alberta) Formations and is of late Campanian (Judithian) age. This correlation is based primarily on the absence in the Fruitland Formation of dinosaurs typical of post-Judithian dinosaur faunas elsewhere in western North America. The dinosaur fauna of the Kirtland Shale below the Naashoibito Member is virtually identical to that of the Fruitland Formation. Based on stratigraphic relationships, the Kirtland Shale must be younger than the Fruitland Formation and may be as young as Edmontonian (latest Campanian-early Maastrichtian) below the Naashoibito Member. The Naashoibito Member of the Kirtland Shale contains cf. Tyrannosaurus rex, Alamosaurus sanjuanensis, and Torosaurus cf. T. utahensis, taxa indicative of a Lancian (middle-late Maastrichtian) age. Therefore, Kritosaurus from the Naashoibito Member represents the youngest known occurrence of this genus. The Lancian age of the Naashoibito Member indicates that the unconformity at the base of the Ojo Alamo Sandstone is not of as great a temporal magnitude as most previous workers had believed. Thus, there is a nearly complete record of the Cretaceous-Tertiary transition in the west-central San Juan Basin, indicated by dinosaur-based correlation of the Fruitland and Kirtland Formations. This correlation is consistent with most other evidence, except magnetostratigraphy, that has been used to determine the age of the Fruitland and Kirtland Formations.