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Interfingering of the Frontier Formation and Aspen Shale, Cumberland Gap, Wyoming.

January 1, 1982

The basal part, or the Chalk Creek Member, of the non-marine lower Frontier Formation (Upper Cretaceous) includes a thin coal bed that grades S into a carbonaceous shale. The latter plus associated sandstones and shales pinch out S of Cumberland Gap and lie stratigraphically below the top of the Aspen Shale. The beds in the upper part of the Aspen, in turn, pinch out within the Frontier Formation. The coal bed and equivalent carbonaceous shale represent in-place accumulation of peat. The interfingering suggests that in SW Wyoming the Lower/Upper Cretaceous boundary is within the Chalk Creek Member. -from Author

Publication Year 1982
Title Interfingering of the Frontier Formation and Aspen Shale, Cumberland Gap, Wyoming.
Authors J. M'gonigle
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Mountain Geologist
Index ID 70011766
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse