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Beeman Formation

Geologic formation in New Mexico, US From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The Beeman Formation is a geologic formation in the Sacramento Mountains of New Mexico.[1][2] It preserves fossils dating back to the Kasimovian Age of the Pennsylvanian Period.[3]

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Description

The Beeman Formation consists of cyclic[4] shale and argillaceous limestone with some conglomerate. The thickness is 350–500 ft (110–150 m).[5] The formation overlies the Gobbler Formation and is overlain by the Holder Formation.[1]

The formation is interpreted as cyclic deposition on a continental shelf following rejuvenation of the Pedernal uplift of the Ancestral Rocky Mountains.[4]

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Fossils

The unit contains middle to upper Missourian (Kasimovian) fusulinids[5] and conodonts, including several species of the fusulinid Triticites and the conodont Idiognathodus symmetricus, related species, and species of Streptognathodus. These species indicate that the Beeman Formation is entirely Kasimovian in age.[3] The formation has a diverse coprofauna.[6] The formation has also produced a lacustrine fauna from one of its shell beds, including the horseshoe crab Euproops danae.[7]

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History of investigation

The unit was first named by Lloyd C. Pray in 1954[1] and a type section was designated in 1959.[5] Pray originally assigned the formation to the Magdalena Group, but the Magdalena Group has subsequently been abandoned.[8][2]

See also

References

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