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  2. Mazon Creek fossil beds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mazon_Creek_fossil_beds

    The Mazon Creek fossils are found in the Upper Carboniferous Francis Creek Shale. [6] The type locality is the Mazon River (or Mazon Creek), a tributary of the Illinois River near Morris, Grundy County, Illinois. The 25 to 30 meters of shale were formed approximately , during the Pennsylvanian period.

  3. Sespe Formation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sespe_Formation

    The Sespe Formation is a widespread fossiliferous sedimentary geologic unit in southern and south central California in the United States. It is of nonmarine origin, consisting predominantly of sandstones and conglomerates laid down in a riverine, shoreline, and floodplain environment between the upper Eocene Epoch (around 40 million years ago) through the lower Miocene.

  4. Franciscan Complex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franciscan_Complex

    The Franciscan Complex is an assemblage of metamorphosed and deformed rocks, associated with east-dipping subduction zone at the western coast of North America. [6] Although most of the Franciscan is Early/Late Jurassic through Cretaceous in age (150-66 Ma), [7] some Franciscan rocks are as old as early Jurassic (180-190 Ma) age and as young as ...

  5. Geology and geological history of California - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geology_and_geological...

    The oldest rocks in California date back 1.8 billion years to the Proterozoic and are found in the San Gabriel Mountains, San Bernardino Mountains, and Mojave Desert.The rocks of eastern California formed a shallow continental shelf, with massive deposition of limestone during the Paleozoic, and sediments from this time are common in the Sierra Nevada, Klamath Mountains and eastern Transverse ...

  6. Monterey Formation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monterey_Formation

    According to the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) in 2011, the 1,750-square-mile (4,500 km 2) Monterey Shale Formation contained more than half of the United States's total estimated technically recoverable shale oil (tight oil contained in shale, as distinct from oil shale) resource, about 15.4 billion barrels (2.45 × 10 ^ 9 m 3). [10]

  7. List of fossil sites - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fossil_sites

    List of fossil parks around the world. List of fossil parks in India. Pleistocene fossils in Michigan. List of human evolution fossils. Malapa Fossil Site, Cradle of Humankind – Cave. Mary Anning – British fossil collector and palaeontologist (1799–1847) Paleobiology – Study of organic evolution using fossils.

  8. Mint Canyon Formation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mint_Canyon_Formation

    Mint Canyon Formation. / 34.5; -118.5. / 33.9; -115.0. The Mint Canyon Formation ( Tm) is a Miocene geologic formation in the Sierra Pelona Mountains of Los Angeles County, southern California. [ 1] The formation preserves fossils dating back to the Middle to Late Miocene ( Barstovian and Clarendonian in NALMA classification ).

  9. Pierre Shale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Shale

    The Pierre Shale is a geologic formation or series in the Upper Cretaceous which occurs east of the Rocky Mountains in the Great Plains, from Pembina Valley in Canada [2] to New Mexico. The Pierre Shale was described by Meek and Hayden in 1862 in the Proceedings of the Academy of Sciences (Philadelphia).