showing the relationship of the Mesaverde Group The
Mesaverde Group is a
Late Cretaceous stratigraphic
group found in areas of
Colorado,
New Mexico,
Utah, and
Wyoming, in the
Western United States. The group is a single
regression-
transgression sequence in its type location in the
San Juan Basin, dividing the older marine
Mancos Shale and younger
Lewis Shale deposited in the
Western Interior Seaway. The
Point Lookout Sandstone represents the regression, the
Menefee Formation the subsequent fluvial delta deposits, and the
Cliff House Sandstone the return of the sea. In other locations, such as along the Book Cliffs, the picture is more complicated, with multiple regression-transgression sequences from tectonic activity along the
Sevier mountain front. In the Cody area, the group is a simple regression sequence and remains at formation rank. Here the group is described as interbedded light gray sandstone and gray shale in the upper part; massive, light-buff, ledge-forming sandstone containing thin lenticular coal beds in the lower part.
Formations • Northern Piceance Basin: •
Williams Fork Formation •
Iles Formation • southwestern Piceance Basin: • Hunter Canyon Formation • Mount Garfield Formation • Powder River Basin: • Teapot Sandstone • Parkman Sandstone • Northern San Juan Basin: • Point Lookout Sandstone • Menefee Formation • Cliff House Sandstone • Southern San Juan Basin and southern New Mexico: • Point Lookout Sandstone •
Crevasse Canyon Formation •
Gallup Sandstone • Uintah Basin: • Tuscher Formation • Farrer Formation •
Neslen Formation • Sego Sandstone •
Price River Formation •
Castlegate Sandstone •
Blackhawk Formation • Star Point Sandstone • Washakie Basin: •
Almond Formation • Ericson Sandstone •
Rock Springs Formation • Blair Formation
Fossils Dinosaur remains are among the fossils that have been recovered from the group, although none have yet been referred to a specific
genus.
Deinosuchus has also been reported from Mesaverde outcrops in Wyoming. In 2023,
baenid turtle fossils tentatively assignable to
Neurankylus sp. from the Mesaverde Formation were described. ==See also==