Palm Park Formation
The Palm Park Formation is a geologic formation in southern New Mexico. It preserves fossils dating back to the Eocene epoch.
Description
The formation consists of reddish clastic sediments, including some beds of boulder conglomerate with individual boulders up to in diameter. The red color is attributed to a source in the Abo Formation. The upper beds contains considerable latite to andesite breccia interbedded with tuffaceous claystone and siltstone. The Palm Park Formation rests gradationally on the Love Ranch Formation, is unconformably overlain by the Bell Top Formation, Rincon Valley Formation, or Santa Fe Group, and has a thickness of about.The original age estimate, based on radiometric ages of intrusions and interbedded flows, ranged from 42 to 51 million years. More recent high-precision U-Pb dating gives an age of 45.0±0.7 Ma for an ash fall tuff in the lower part of the formation in the Robledo Mountains and an age of 39.6±0.5 Ma for an ash fall tuff in the upper part of the formation in the Sierra de las Uvas. The interbedded ash fall tuffs and volcaniclastic beds of the formation are interpreted as volcanic activity after the end of Laramide mountain building but before the opening of the Rio Grande Rift. At this time, the remnants of the Farallon Plate began to sink into the deep mantle and hot mantle rock rose to take their place, triggering the Mid-Tertiary ignimbrite flare-up.
Fossils
The Palm Park Formation contains hot-water stromatolites. Stable oxygen isotope measurements show that the fine layers making up the stromatolites were deposited seasonally, with the sparry layers deposited in the spring and summer, and the micritic layers deposited in the fall and winter. This suggests that laminae in more ancient stromatolites are also seasonal in nature.The formation also contains Eocene fossil vertebrates of Chadronian age. These are found in deeply weathered volcaniclastic beds of the middle and upper part of the formation that are interbedded with plant- and gastropod-bearing travertines, and most are also badly weathered. However, they include shell fragments of the tortoise Stylemys, jaw fragments of Hyaenodon horriblis, tooth fragments likely of Hyracodon, and a partial skeleton of a protoceratid.