BETA TEST - Fossil data and pages are very much experimental and under development. Please report any problems
CAS 2259, San Joaquin County, California, USA
Lat/Long (Decimal) | 37.62,-121.45 |
---|---|
Co-ordinates Derivation | based on nearby landmark |
Given Location | California, United States |
Mindat.org Region (for given coordinates) | San Joaquin County, California, USA |
Collections
Collection | Reference | Stratigraphic Name | Comments | Lithology | Age |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
CAS 2259, Hetch Hetchy Tunnel | Matsumoto T. (1960) | LITHOSTRATIGRAPHIC RELATIONS: From an unnamed lithostratigraphic unit. AGE: Early Maastrichtian in text; on the basis of ammonite biostratigraphy. STRATIGRAPHIC POSITION: Shale exposed in creek bank. | "shale" | 70.6 - 66 Ma Late/Upper Cretaceous |
Recorded Fossils
Accepted Name | Hierarchy | Age |
---|---|---|
Baculites sp. genus | Animalia : Mollusca : Cephalopoda : Ammonoidea : Baculitidae : Baculites | 70.6 - 66 Ma Late/Upper Cretaceous |
Damesites hetonaiensis species | Animalia : Mollusca : Cephalopoda : Ammonoidea : Desmoceratidae : Damesites : Damesites hetonaiensis | 70.6 - 66 Ma Late/Upper Cretaceous |
Nostoceras sp. genus | Animalia : Mollusca : Cephalopoda : Ammonoidea : Nostoceratidae : Nostoceras | 70.6 - 66 Ma Late/Upper Cretaceous |
Pachydiscus (Neodesmoceras) sp. subgenus | Animalia : Mollusca : Cephalopoda : Ammonitida : Pachydiscidae : Pachydiscus : Pachydiscus (Neodesmoceras) | 70.6 - 66 Ma Late/Upper Cretaceous |
Pachydiscus (Pachydiscus) sp. subgenus | Animalia : Mollusca : Cephalopoda : Ammonitida : Pachydiscidae : Pachydiscus : Pachydiscus (Pachydiscus) | 70.6 - 66 Ma Late/Upper Cretaceous |
References
Matsumoto T. (1960) Upper Cretaceous ammonites of California. Part III, Memoirs of the Faculty of Science, Kyushu University Series D, Geology, Special Volume II, 1-204 |
Data courtesy of: PBDB: The Paleobiology Database, Creative Commons CC-BY licenced. , GBIF: the Global Biodiversity Information Facility, various licences, iDigBio, various licences, and EOL: The Encyclopedia of Life (Open Data Public Domain). Because fossils are made of minerals too!