Todilto Formation
The Todilto Formation is a geologic formation in northern New Mexico and southeastern Colorado. It preserves fossils dating back to the Callovian stage of the middle Jurassic period.
Description
The formation consists of evaporites. It is divided into a lower calcareous shale up to thick, and an upper gypsum bed.Based on varve counts in the Luciano Mesa Member, the formation was laid down in a geologically brief period of time, likely in a salina that was replenished both by rivers and by seepage or periodic flooding from the Sundance Sea. The varves show a 10 to 13 year periodicity that is interpreted as the solar sunspot cycle, showing that this cycle has existed for at least 160 million years. The contact with the underlying Entrada Formation is very sharp and may indicate the Todilto Sea formed catastrophically from a breach in a barrier between the basin and the Sundance Sea. The presence of dasyclad algae in the Luciano Mesa Member indicates at least some marine flooding.