F.B. Meek and
F.V. Hayden first used
Dakota in 1862 to name the distinctive red sandstone exposures along the Missouri River near
Dakota City, Nebraska. But, with this name, they applied the term "group", which at that time had the meaning of
formation rank, as presently used.
Dakota Formation is the unit's primary name and rank in the
Great Plains. Formation rank is also applied in western extents (e.g., northeast Utah) as the unit thins and exhibits formational characteristics, the marine shales are absent, and fossil pollen species correlate with those found in the unit on the
Missouri River. However, Dakota Sandstone is everywhere a common informal name for the unit, especially for the sandstone beds. the
Dry Cimarron River, The
Skull Creek Shale and
Plainview Sandstone of Colorado are also included in the Dakota Group, as is the
Cedar Mountain Formation of Utah and its Buckhorn Conglomerate member. However, these units represent a separate
seaway sequence in the time between the Lytle and "upper Dakota" (Mowry) sequences, and in the plains to the east, the same units are named
Kiowa Shale and
Cheyenne Sandstone, which are considered separate from the Dakota Formation as defined in Kansas and, moreover, do not appear at the type location in Nebraska. However, subsequent
sequence stratigraphic and
palynostratigraphic research has demonstrated that the Dakota Formation at the type location includes sand and mudstones covering the same ages and sequences as the "marine shale facies of the Graneros" and "early Late Albian Kiowa-Skull Creek". and famous for its
artesian properties. Elsewhere, when deeper, especially in the
Denver Basin, these same sands have been
sought after for hydrocarbon reserves. "
Drillers", who navigate deep strata by monitoring material brought to the surface in the
drilling mud, alphabetically designated the hydrocarbon "producing sands" of the Dakota in the Denver Basin as (highest) "
D", "
J", "M", and "O" (lowest). Colorado's "D" and "J" of the driller's Denver Basin have been particularly important to Nebraska, Kansas, and Oklahoma in their efforts of correlating their eastern outcrops with the Dakota units in the Denver Basin and the western units in general. == Geological history ==