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| Jaisalmer Formation | |
|---|---|
| Stratigraphic range: Middle-Late Jurassic, | |
An outcrop of the Jaisalmer Formation which is the type locality for Tharosaurus indicus. Photographed between 2019-21. | |
| Type | Geological formation |
| Sub-units | Badabag Member, Fort Member, Hamira Member, Jajiya Member, Joyan Member, Kuldhar Member |
| Underlies | Baisakhi Formation |
| Overlies | Lathi Formation |
| Thickness | Variable, typically 120–170 km (75–106 mi) |
| Lithology | |
| Primary | Siltstone, sandstone |
| Other | Limestone |
| Location | |
| Coordinates | 26°54′42″N 70°55′23″E / 26.911661°N 70.922928°E |
| Country | India |
| Extent | Jaisalmer |
| Type section | |
| Named for | Jaisalmer, India |
| Named by | Richard Dixon Oldham |
| Year defined | 1886[1] |
The Jaisalmer Formation is a Middle to Late Jurassic-aged geologic formation located in India near the city of Jaisalmer that consists mainly of marine deposits.[2] The formation was first identified and defined by geologist Richard Dixon Oldham in 1886.[1]
Dinosaur remains are among the known fossils recovered from this formation.[3]
Strophodus jaisalmerensis, a hybodont, was named after this formation and the Jaisalmer District where its holotype was found.[4]
The Badabag, Fort, Joyan and Hamira members represent the Middle Jurassic Bajocian and Bathonian stages,[2] while the Jajiya and Kuldhar members represent the Middle Jurassic Callovian and the Late Jurassic Oxfordian stages.[2]
The Fort Member is the most extensively studied and consists of fine to medium grain sandstones and oolitic limestones.[5] The Badabag Member consists of intraformational conglomerate and is fossil bearing.[6]
The Jaisalmer district of India is a landlocked district in the state of Rajasthan. However, during the Middle Jurassic, the Jaisalmer Formation was located on the Tethyan coast of Gondwanan India. A marine paleoenvironment is supported by the presence of Hybodont sharks.[4] The Kuldhar Member Limestone contained carbonate microfacies that also indicate a depositional environment composed mainly of lagoons, shoals and open marine environments.[7]
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (August 2022) |
Color key
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Notes Uncertain or tentative taxa are in small text; |
| Sauropods of the Jaisalmer Formation | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | Species | Locality | Material | Notes | Photos |
| Turiasauria[6] | indeterminate | Chandoo Village quarry | Fragmentary tooth. | The oldest turiasaur. | |
| Tharosaurus[8] | T. indicus | Jethwai Village | Partial cervical, dorsal, and caudal vertebrae and a dorsal rib. | Oldest dicraeosaurid and oldest diplodocoid. | |
| Theropods of the Jaisalmer Formation | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | Species | Locality | Material | Notes | Photos |
| Spinosauridae[9] | Indeterminate | Chandoo Village quarry | Pedal ungual phalanx. | Possibly the oldest spinosaurid. Had affinities with spinosaurinae. | |
| Averostra[10] | indeterminate | Chandoo Village quarry | Isolated tooth. | A possible Ceratosaur or a Non Spinosaurid Megalosauroid or a Allosauroid. | |
| Reptiles of the Jaisalmer Formation | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | Species | Locality | Material | Notes | Photos |
| Crocodylomorpha[6] | Indeterminate | Chandoo Village quarry | Scutes. | ||
| Neodiapsida[6][10] | Indeterminate | Chandoo Village quarry | Teeth. | Either a sauropterygian, thalattosaurian, choristodere or an ichthyosauromorph. | |
| Fishes of the Jaisalmer Formation | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | Species | Locality | Material | Notes | Photos |
| Hybodontiformes Indet.[11] | Indeterminate | ||||
| Strophodus | S. jaisalmerensis | Jethwai village | Teeth. | A hybodont shark. | |
| S. indicus[12] | Chandoo Village quarry | ||||
| S. magnus[12] | Chandoo Village quarry | ||||
| S. medius[12] | Chandoo Village quarry | ||||
| Planohybodus | P. aff. grossiconus [12] | Chandoo Village quarry | Teeth. | A hybodont shark. | |
| Osteichthyes[10] | Indeterminate. | Chandoo Village quarry | Teeth and scales. | Found along with an averostran tooth. | |
| cf. Eomesodon[13] | cf. Eomesodon sp. | Jethwai Village | Prearticular dental plate and isolated teeth. | Oldest East Gondwanan Pycnodont. | |
| Crustaceans of the Jaisalmer Formation | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genus | Species | Locality | Material | Notes | Photos |
| Cytherella[14] | C. indica | ||||
| Micropneumatocythere[14] | M. joyanensis | ||||
| Progonocythere[14] | P. khoslai | ||||
| Trichordis[14] | T. minuta | ||||
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