- Bearpaw Formation
The Bearpaw Formation, also called the Bearpaw Shale, is a
sedimentary rock formation found in northwesternNorth America . It is exposed in theU.S. state ofMontana , as well as the Canadian provinces ofAlberta andSaskatchewan , east of theRocky Mountains . It overlies the older Two Medicine, Judith River andDinosaur Park Formation s, and is in turn overlain by theHorseshoe Canyon Formation in Canada and theFox Hills Sandstone in Montana. To the east and south it blends into thePierre Shale .A marine formation composed mostly of
shale , it represents the last major expansion of theWestern Interior Seaway before it completely receded from northwestern North America by the end of theCretaceous Period . The seaway had previously divided North America in half beforeorogeny (mountain-building) in the west uplifted the land and forced the seaway to retreat. As the uplift slowed down or ground to a halt in the lateCampanian stage, around 74million years ago , subsidence of the land allowed the seaway to invade once more. This northern expansion is often called the Bearpaw Sea. When theLaramide Orogeny resumed in the earlyMaastrichtian , the seaway retreated to the south for the final time. Because the sea did not disappear all at once, but instead slowly withdrew to the south, the Bearpaw Formation is superseded by the terrestrial sediments of the Horseshoe Canyon in Canada, while in Montana the Fox Hills Sandstone represents a near-shore marine environment. The Fox Hills too would be replaced by the terrestrial sediments of theHell Creek Formation in Montana by the late Maastrichtian.It is famous for its well-preserved
ammonite fossil s. Other fossils found in this formation include many types ofshellfish ,bony fish ,shark s, rays,bird s, and marine reptiles likemosasaur s,plesiosaur s andsea turtle s. The occasionaldinosaur remains have also been discovered, presumably from carcasses washed out to sea.External links
* [http://cgkn1.cgkn.net/weblex/weblex_litho_detail_e.pl?00053:000966 Bearpaw Formation]
* [http://www.scn.org/~bh162/maas.html Latest Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway]
* [http://www.digitaldreammachine.com/sadrg/formation_bearpaw.html Bearpaw fauna in Alberta]
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