Point Lookout Sandstone


The Point Lookout Sandstone is a Cretaceous bedrock formation occurring in New Mexico and Colorado.

Description

The formation consists of two informal members. The lower is a sequence of thinly bedded sandstone and shale, while the upper is a massive medium- to fine-grained cross-bedded sandstone, light gray to buff in color, that is a conspicuous cliff-forming unit. Maximum thickness is.
The lower contact is placed at the first thin sandstone bed above the shale of the Mancos Shale. The formation is overlain by the Menefee Formation.
The Point Lookout Sandstone was deposited in the Cretaceous Interior Seaway, as part of a regressive sequence as the seaway was receding. It is transitional between the marine environment of the underlying Mancos and the coastal plain environment of the overlying Menefee Formation.

Fossils

remains are among the fossils that have been recovered from the formation, although none have yet been referred to a specific genus.
The ammonite Clioscaphites vermiformis was identified in the formation.

History of investigation

The sandstone was first described by A. J. Collier for exposures in cliffs at Point Lookout, in Mesa Verde National Park, Montezuma County, Colorado, in the Paradox Basin, and later described by Allen and Balk in 1954 as part of the Mesaverde Group in the San Juan Basin in New Mexico.

Footnotes