Tetrapod biostratigraphy The Chinle Formation is entirely
Late Triassic in age. Tetrapod biostratigraphy for the Chinle was first developed based on
phytosaurs and
aetosaurs, which in 1998 were combined into global biozones in
Spencer G. Lucas's
Land Vertebrate Faunachrons system. Simplified
stratigraphy based on Litwin. Note that age inferences devised by Lucas do not necessarily align with other chronological methods used in the Chinle Formation. Other works on Chinle biostratigraphy, such as Martz & Parker (2017), are better integrated with magnetostratigraphy and radiometric dating, and are considered more accurate.
Radiometric dating Since 2011, widespread
radiometric dating has helped to refine precise age data for part of the Chinle Formation, particularly in areas with a more complete stratigraphic record such as Petrified Forest National Park (PEFO). Volcanism further southwest along the
Cordilleran magmatic arc supplies
zircon crystals to the Chinle system, allowing for
U-Pb dating of layers which host zircon grains. Eroded sediments from the
Ancestral Rocky Mountains,
Ouachita Mountains and
Mogollon Highlands also supply older reworked zircon to the basin. Chinle radiometric dating is complicated by lithological quirks of zircon deposition. Taken at face value, U-Pb dates from coarse-grained layers are often several million years older than expected based on magnetostratigraphy, while mud-dominated layers are generally more accurate despite a lower sample size. This is likely because sandy rivers receive a higher proportion of recycled zircon grains from distant eroded rocks, while muddy plains are supplied with fresh zircon-rich ash from contemporary volcanic eruptions. While zircons from sandstone-rich layers are less useful for inferring direct depositional ages, they can be very useful for inferring sediment sources: each igneous or metamorphic sediment source has its own set of old (usually Precambrian) zircon ages, which can be traced in Triassic sediments. or ~228 Ma (2013), though these may be influenced by recycled grains. At PEFO, U-Pb estimates from the
Blue Mesa Member include 223 Ma (2011), At Six Mile Canyon near
Fort Wingate, New Mexico, the base of the Blue Mesa Member (or its local equivalent) is defined by a distinct sandstone bed, which has been dated to 221–219 Ma (2009) The underlying
Bluewater Creek Formation has also been dated to 221–219 Ma (2014), suggesting that it overlaps in time with the Arizonan Blue Mesa Member and possibly part of the Sonsela Member. The first Chinle U-Pb age data to be published referred to the Black Forest Bed, a sandstone layer near the top of the
Petrified Forest Member in PEFO. U-Pb estimates for this layer include ~213 Ma (2003 maximum), ~211 Ma (2009), and ~210 Ma (2011, 2020). A presumably older exposure of the Petrified Forest Member, the Hayden Quarry at Ghost Ranch, is dated to 212 Ma (2011). A similar age was found for the middle part of the member in PEFO. The end of the Petrified Forest Member was probably close to 208 Ma, meaning that overlying strata is presumably latest Norian-Rhaetian in age. ==Places found==