Mint Canyon Formation

The Mint Canyon Formation (Tm) is a Miocene geologic formation in the Sierra Pelona Mountains of Los Angeles County, southern California.[1] The formation preservs fossils dating back to the Middle to Late Miocene (Barstovian and Clarendonian in NALMA classification).[2]

Mint Canyon Formation
Stratigraphic range: Mid-Late Miocene (Barstovian-Clarendonian)
~16–11 Ma
TypeGeologic formation
UnderliesCastaic & Saugus Formations
OverliesTick Canyon Formation
Lithology
PrimaryConglomerate & sandstone
OtherMudstone
Location
Coordinates34.5°N 118.5°W / 34.5; -118.5
Approximate paleocoordinates33.9°N 115.0°W / 33.9; -115.0
RegionLos Angeles County, California
Country United States
ExtentSierra Pelona Ridge, San Gabriel Mountains
Type section
Named forMint Canyon
Named byKew
Year defined1923
Mint Canyon Formation (the United States)
Mint Canyon Formation (California)

Geology

Mint Canyon is a fluvial landform in the Sierra Pelona range. It consists of terrestrial deposits from streams and lakes consisting mostly of sandstone and conglomerate with some claystone.[1][3]

The formation correlates with the Caliente Formation in the Plush Ranch Basin to the northwest and the lower Punchbowl Formation in the Punchbowl Block to the southeast.[4] The Mint Canyon Formation consists primarily of fluvial, alluvial, and lacustrine conglomerates, sandstones, and mudstones. The Mint Canyon Formation is overlain by the dominantly marine Castaic Formation, which consists of shale, sandstone, and minor conglomerate.[5] In the Texas Canyon sub-basin, the formation is overlain by the Saugus Formation.[6] The contact between the Mint Canyon and Castaic Formations is an angular unconformity in some places, and it is apparently conformable and gradational in others.[5]

Fossil content

The formation preserves vertebrate fossils dating back to the Middle Miocene subperiod of the Neogene period:[2]

Artiodactyls

Perissodactyls

Rodents

  • Pronotolagus apachensis[8]

Proboscideans

Carnivora

See also

References

  1. Elsmerecanyon.com: "Tick Canyon Geology"
  2. Mint Canyon Formation at Fossilworks.org
  3. "Geologic Map of the Mint Canyon Quadrangle" (DF-57) by Thomas W. Dibblee, Jr., 1996.
  4. Coffey et al., 2019, p.480
  5. Coffey et al., 2019, p.481
  6. Coffey et al., 2019, p.492
  7. Stirton, 1933
  8. Maxson, 1930
  9. Alroy, 2002

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Geology of the Mint Canyon Area by William Holser, 1946
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