Menefee Formation


The Menefee Formation is a Campanian geologic formation of New Mexico, United States.

Description

The Menefee Formation consists of fluvial sandstone, shale, and coal. Age estimates from ammonite biostratigraphy, palynostratigraphy, and direct radiometric dating are discrepant but the most likely age is around 81 Ma, corresponding to the early Campanian.
Named members include a lower Cleary Coal Member and an upper Allison Member.
The Mesaverde Group in the San Juan Basin records a regression-transgression sequence of the western margin of the Western Interior Seaway. The Menefee Formation was deposited at the peak of the regression as coastal delta and swamp sediments, and includes numerous coal beds.
The formation is exposed at Chaco Canyon National Park, where many of the coal beds have been burned to produce distinctive red cinder outcrops.

Fossils

The Menefee Formation includes fossils of turtles, fish and crocodiles and fragmentary evidence of hadrosaurs, ankylosaurs, ceratopsian dinosaurs, and mosasaurs. Plant fossils include leaf impressions of palms, conifers, laurels, witchhazel, and camellia. The flora are suggestive of a moist subtropical environment.

Vertebrate fauna

Several vertebrates have been recovered from the Menefee Formation, including intermediate remains of baenids, trionychids, hadrosaurids and dromeaosaurids. An unnamed centrosaurine ceratopsid is also known.

Economic geology

The Menefee Formation has been extensively mined for coal since the early 20th century. The Monero field in Rio Arriba County, New Mexico, was mined from the 1880s into the early 1920s to support the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad, but while the coal is of good quality, the coal beds are relatively thin and the terrain is rugged. Remaining reserves are around 13.5 million tons, inadequate for economic exploitation in the 21st century.

History of investigation

The Menefee Formation was first described by W.H.Holmes in 1877 during the Hayden Survey as the "Middle Coal Group" of the Mesaverde Formation. A.J. Collier redesignated this unit in 1919 as the Menefee Formation and raised the Mesaverde Formation to group rank.