The Hoko River Formation consists of sediments deposited on the inner and middle slopes of a deep marine
fan system. It is composed primarily of siltstones and some sandstones exposed under and to the south of the main
Makah Formation outcrops along the Strait of Juan De Fuca. The type section, as designated by
Parke Snavely et al., is a section which outcrops along the
Hoko River, for which the formation is named, and a section which outcrops along Deep Creek. While the Hoko River formation overlies the
Lyre Formation in many places, the two formations intertongue in others. The Makah and Hoko River formations are separated by a major unconformity. Calcareous
clasts in the formation contain crab, gastropod, cephalopod, and wood fossils. Magnetostratigraphy performed in 2008 on samples taken from the type section of the Hoko River formation showed a correlation of age with either
Chron C18r (40.0–41.2 Ma) or Chron C17r (38.0–38.2Ma). A closer correlation was not possible due to the limited sample size obtained for the testing. Of note is that the samples tested for both the Makah and Hoko River Formations showed a slight counterclockwise tectonic rotation. This is in contrast to many other formations of similar ages on the Olympic Peninsula with clockwise rotations. Similar results, however, from some formations on Vancouver Island and the northern Olympic Peninsula have been reported. ==Paleontology==