Tag Archive for: POTD

Rainbow Bridge National Monument, San Juan County, Utah
Photographer: Mike Hylland

Rainbow Bridge near Lake Powell, Rainbow Bridge National Monument, San Juan County, Utah.

Horseshoe Canyon Wilderness Study Area, Emery County, Utah
Photographer: Sonja Heuscher

Stream erosion during uplift of the Colorado Plateau incised the Green River channel deep into the Triassic–Jurassic-age Wingate Sandstone and underlying Chinle Formation. At Bowknot Bend, the channel turns back on itself in a huge meander loop.

Coral Pink Sand Dunes State Park, Kane County, Utah.
Photographer: Michael Vanden Berg

Large star dune in Coral Pink Sand Dunes State
Park, Kane County, Utah.

Coral Pink Sand Dunes State Park, Kane County, Utah.
Photographer: Michael Vanden Berg

Beetle on rippled dune face, Coral Pink Sand Dunes State Park, Kane County, Utah.

nps.gov

Cambrian Fossils in Utah’s West Desert, Millard County

Utah is recognized for having the longest and most diverse dinosaur record in the nation. Yet, the Cambrian rocks in Utah’s West Desert contain one of our nation’s best records of the early evolution of life on Earth. View a slideshow of rocks and fossils from the West Desert here. During the Cambrian Period, North America straddled the Equator and the continent was oriented nearly 90 degrees clockwise of its present position. The Cambrian coastline extended north-south across Utah shifting southward (our east) with rising sea level. This resulted in a nearly complete sequence of Cambrian rocks preserved in Utah’s West Desert on what was the northern coastline of early North America. When Tertiary extension forces formed the Basin and Range Geological Province throughout the last 20 million years, these Cambrian rocks became well-exposed across western and central Utah, revealing the extraordinary fossil record within. Nowhere is this geology better exposed than in Millard County, Utah. Refer to Hintze and Davis (2003) (17 MB PDF) for a detailed discussion of the county’s geology. The Cambrian is best known for the “Cambrian Explosion” (or “Cambrian Radiation”) , when a great diversity of multicellular animals first appears. The first scientific report on these fossils was a description of Elrathia kingii in 1860, probably the world’s most well-known trilobite species.

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Desolation Canyon, Emery County, Utah
Photographer: Tyler Knudsen

Rippled sand bar along the Green River in Desolation Canyon, Emery County, Utah

Snow Canyon State Park, Washington County, Utah
Photographer: Michael Vanden Berg

Eroded cross-beds in the Navajo Sandstone capture spherical hematite (iron oxide) concretions that have weathered out of  overlying strata. The Navajo Sandstone comprises “fossilized” sand dune deposits of Early Jurassic age.

deseretnews.com

Have a hankering to see a hoodoo? Do you find argillite alluring? Savor scallops, and not the seafood kind?

Those vastly unique geologic features showcased in landscapes across Utah are captured in the photography displayed by the 2014 Utah Geology Calendar, an annual tradition that reflects the work and expertise of geologists with the Utah Geological Survey.

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Grand Staircase–Escalante National Monument, Kane County, Utah.
Photographer: Tyler Knudsen

Iron oxide-stained sandstone at “Yellow Rock,” Grand Staircase–Escalante National Monument, Kane County, Utah.

Iron County, Utah
Photographer: Tyler Knudsen

Finely laminated sandstone of the Chinle Formation, Iron County, Utah.