North Horn Formation

North Horn Formation
Stratigraphic range: Maastrichtian-Danian
~
Type locality for the North Horn Formation on North Horn Mountain, Emery County, Utah
TypeGeological formation
UnderliesFlagstaff Formation
OverliesPrice River & Tuscher Formations
Thickness>1,100 m (3,600 ft)
Lithology
PrimarySandstone, shale, conglomerate
OtherSiltstone, limestone, coal
Location
Coordinates39°00′N 111°00′W / 39.0°N 111.0°W / 39.0; -111.0
Approximate paleocoordinates46°48′N 88°00′W / 46.8°N 88.0°W / 46.8; -88.0
RegionUtah
CountryUnited States
Extent~140 km (87 mi)
Type section
Named forNorth Horn Mountain
North Horn Formation (the United States)
North Horn Formation (Utah)

The North Horn Formation is a widespread non-marine sedimentary unit with extensive outcrops exposed in central and eastern Utah. The formation locally exceeds 3,600 feet (1,100 m) in thickness and is characterized by fluvial, lacustrine, and floodplain dominated systems, representing a terrestrial, high energy, depositional environment. The sediments date from Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) to early Paleocene in age and include the K-Pg extinction event boundary; however, this boundary is extremely difficult to locate and there is no strong stratigraphic evidence available that indicates a specific marker bed such as an iridium rich clay layer. Thus far, the only visible evidence is represented in the form of faunal turnover from dinosaur to mammal-dominated fossil assemblages. Taxa from the Cretaceous part of the formation include squamates, testudines, choristoderes, crocodyliforms, sharks, bony fishes, amphibians, mammals, dinosaurs, eggshell fragments, trace fossils, mollusks, plant macrofossils, such as wood fragments, and palynomorphs.