Chaco Culture National Historic ParkGeology
Chaco Canyon lies near the center of the San Juan Basin of New Mexico, which is near the southeastern edge of the much larger Colorado Plateau. This region has broad exposures of horizontal sedimentary layers that have eroded into plateaus, mesas, buttes, and canyons. The rocks exposed in Chaco Canyon record an interval in the Earth's history during the Late Cretaceous Period, approximately 75 to 80 million years ago. During this time, Chaco was part of the migrating coastline of an ancient inland sea.
The Cretaceous Setting
In the Late Cretaceous, much of the Southern Rocky Mountain Region was characterized by a subtropical climate, which supported lowland forests of conifer, eucalyptus, ebony palm, cypress, and magnolia. Upland areas supported hardwood forests of oak, walnut, ash, and birch. The landscape of late cretaceous Chaco Canyon resembled modern day coastal areas, such as those found on the southeastern Atlantic and Gulf coast of the United States. These mainland beach, coastal plain, and barrier island environments consist of marshes, swamps, river deltas, and lagoons adjacent to beach and relatively shallow coastal waters.
Chaco Geology
Menefee Formation
At the edge of the seaway, the streams meandered through a wide, flat coastal plain with deltas, shallow swamps, and lagoons, accumulating plant material that would eventually form thin coal beds. Common vertebrate fossils include an abundance of turtle, fish, and crocodile as well as fragmentary evidence of larger creatures such as hadrosaur dinosaurs and giant marine lizards known as mosasaurs. Plant fossils found in the Menefee include leaf impressions of palm and conifer as well as specimens closely resembling modern laurel, witch hazel, and camelia, suggesting a warm, moist, subtropical environment. Today, the Menefee in Chaco is visible as a slope forming unit that underlies the steep mesa walls of the more resistant Cliff House sandstone. It is especially prominent on the southern side of the canyon, with a number of excellent exposures visible on Fajada Butte. The Cliff House Sandstone is a complex sequence of marine sandstones with locally interbedded shales that overlies the Menefee Formation. There are three principal Cliff House units visible within Chaco Canyon. The massive lower unit forms the 80-100-foot prominent cliffs throughout the canyon. An abundance of ripple marks and a wide variety of fossils are visible in this unit. Fossils include shells and casts from clams, ammonites, snails, shark's teeth, and the knobby casts of burrows known as Ophimorpha (dwelling place) Nodosa (nodular). These casts are thought to be the fossilized remains of burrows left by a small shrimp-like crustacean known as Callianasa major. Immediately above the lower layer is an intermediate sandstone/shale unit. Although primarily a marine sandstone, it has locally interbedded shales that were deposited in deeper water when the entire area was covered by the Western Interior Seaway. This unit is less resistant to erosion than the lower sandstone and forms gentle slopes rather than cliffs. Fossils found in this unit are similar to those of the lower sandstone. The uppermost unit exposed in Chaco Canyon is the Upper Sandstone. It is similar in composition to the lower sandstone unit and also forms prominent cliffs and ledges. This unit represents a beach and barrier island environment similar to that of the lower sandstone unit. It was deposited in shallower water than the intermediate shale unit and reflects a lowering of the local sea level as the Western Interior Seaway receded for the last time.
Erosion and Cliff Formation
It is probably safe to say the only constant, geologically and otherwise, is change. Soil and rock are always on the move through weathering, erosion, gravity, and the lateral movement of the earth's continents and ocean floors. The landscape is reshaped by these forces over hundreds, perhaps thousands, of years. Rapid occurrences, like rockfalls and earthquakes, also do their share of redistributing soil and rock.
The details, dates, and prices mentioned in this article were accurate at the time of publication.
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