Arundel Formation
| Arundel Formation | |
|---|---|
| Stratigraphic range: | |
| Outdoor excavation on an exposed portion of the Arundel clays at Dinosaur Park at Laurel, Maryland, USA | |
| Type | Geological Formation | 
| Unit of | Potomac Group | 
| Underlies | Patapsco Formation (Unconformity) | 
| Overlies | Patuxent Formation | 
| Thickness | up to 125 feet (40 m) | 
| Lithology | |
| Primary | Claystone, mudstone | 
| Other | Siderite nodules | 
| Location | |
| Region | Maryland, Washington D. C. | 
| Country | United States | 
| Type section | |
| Named for | Anne Arundel County, Maryland | 
| Named by | W. B. Clark, 1897 | 
The Arundel Formation, also known as the Arundel Clay, is a clay-rich sedimentary rock formation, within the Potomac Group, found in Maryland of the United States of America. It dates to the Early Cretaceous, and is of late Aptian or (more likely) early Albian age. This rock unit had been economically important as a source of iron ore, but is now more notable for its dinosaur fossils. It is named for Anne Arundel County, Maryland.
It consists of clay lenses within depressions in the upper part of the Patuxent Formation that may represent oxbow swamp facies. The Arundel Formation contains a high number of terrestrial fauna, indicating that it was deposited in a freshwater fluvial environment, likely representing slow-moving river channels and oxbows. The Arundel Formation is the only major source for Early Cretaceous terrestrial vertebrates in eastern North America, and provides the best record of the dinosaurs that inhabited the region at the time.