The 2600 feet thick Hsanda Gol formation is covered in various places by
Miocene-age variegated clays, sands, and gravels. It rests on top of the
Early Cretaceous Hühteeg Svita formation. The lower portions of the formation are composed of yellow conglomerate, with the higher areas being dominated by red clays, silts and sands, as well as lava and basalt flows. Hsanda Gol was traditionally assigned to the Middle Oligocene, but after the reassignation of the preceding
Ergilian age to the Late
Eocene it has now been rendered early Oligocene. It is followed after a faunal hiatus by the overlaying
Loh Formation which extends from the Late Oligocene into the Miocene and also contains fossil mammals.
Paleomagnetism in underlying and overlaying
lava flows establish the beginning of the formation at the end of the magnetic Chron C13n 33.4 million years ago, and its end at the Chron C12n, 31 million years ago. The Hsanda Gol levels rest directly over, and are continuous with the earlier Houldjin Gravels which are sometimes counted as part of the formation, but were rather deposited during the latest Eocene under wetter and more energetic conditions. In general, the Houldjin Gravels and the Hsanda Gol formation show a transition from more humid, forested conditions to an arid climate with presence of dunes and
ephemeral rivers. Some taxa lived through this change including
hyaenodonts and
indricotheres, but others, such as
brontotheres,
amynodonts,
rhinocerotids and
entelodonts went extinct and are as a result absent from Hsanda Gol proper. The following Loh Formation, on the other hand, represents a return to more benign conditions as indicated by the reappearance of rhinocerotids and the entry of the first
chalicotheres. ==Paleobiota==