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Frenchman Formation

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A scientific artist's depiction of a Tyrannosaurus rex, showing what this famous dinosaur might have looked like.

The Frenchman Formation is a special layer of rock from a very long time ago, during the Late Cretaceous period, near the end of the time when dinosaurs lived. You can find this rock layer in southern Saskatchewan and the Cypress Hills area in southeastern Alberta. A scientist named G.M. Furnival described this formation in 1942 after looking at rocks along the Frenchman River, between places called Ravenscrag and near Highway 37.

This rock layer is important because it holds fossils from some of the last dinosaurs that ever lived. It is very similar to another famous rock layer called the Hell Creek Formation in the United States. Both places help scientists learn about the world right before the dinosaurs disappeared from Earth.

Lithology

The Frenchman Formation is made of olive-green to brown sandstone. The sandstone has grains that range from fine to coarse and contains layers of claystone. There are also small parts of conglomerate with rounded quartzite pebbles, especially near the bottom in some areas.

Thickness and distribution

The Frenchman Formation is located in southwestern Saskatchewan and the Cypress Hills area of southeastern Alberta. The thickest part of this formation is about 113 meters.

Age

The Frenchman Formation is from the very end of a time called the Maastrichtian. This was the last part of the Cretaceous period. The top of this formation marks when the Cretaceous period ended and a new time, the Paleogene period, began. We know this by studying tiny fossils and finding a special soil layer with a rare element called iridium.

Relationship to other units

The Frenchman Formation is a layer of rock from a long time ago. Scientists know it is different from the layer above it, called the Ravenscrag Formation. Even though some people thought they were the same, they are separated by a special line in the Earth called the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary.

The Frenchman Formation sits on top of other rock layers, but there is a break called an unconformity between them. Depending on how much erosion happened, the Frenchman Formation can rest on different layers such as the Whitemud Formation, Battle Formation, Eastend Formation, or Bearpaw Formation. It is about the same age as some layers in Alberta and formations in Montana and North Dakota.

Main articles: Ravenscrag Formation, Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary, unconformity, Whitemud Formation, Battle Formation, Eastend Formation, Bearpaw Formation, Scollard Formation, Willow Creek Formation, Coalspur Formation, Hell Creek Formation, Montana, North Dakota

Paleontology

Scientists found fossils in the Frenchman Formation. These fossils help us learn about life from long ago. They found remains of small mammals, like Parectypodus and Alphadon, at a place called the Gryde locality. They also found a piece of bone from a bird called Cimolopteryx.

Plants found in areas like Grasslands National Park show what the forests looked like back then. These plants suggest that forests sometimes caught fire. After a fire, new shrubs would grow before the forests returned to their usual mix of trees. Studies of the leaves show that the area had warm temperatures, around 12–14 °C (54–57 °F), with forests made of many different kinds of trees.

Dinosaurs reported from the Frenchman Formation
GenusSpeciesLocationMaterialImages
AnkylosaurusA. magniventris
cf. Anzucf. A. sp.Two manual unguals
?Dromaeosaurus?D. sp.Scotty siteThree teeth
E. annectens
"Complete skull, [three or four] partial skulls."
E. saskatchewanensis
L. sp.
A partial skeleton
Ornithomimus sp.
Sphaerotholuscf. S. buchholtzae"nearly complete left postorbital"
T. assiniboiensis
Nearly complete skeleton
T. sp.
Frill
T. prorsus
Redpath, SaskatchewanNearly Complete Skull, one other partial skull
T. rex
Nearly complete skeleton
TaxaSpeciesLocalityMaterial
Acer-likeIndeterminateGNP
AlnusA. sp.GNP
AraucaritesA. sp.Chambery CouleeCone
BetulaB. sp.GNP
CercidiphyllumC. sp.Chambery Coulee, GNP
Cinnamomum-likeIndeterminateChambery Coulee, GNP
Ficus?IndeterminateChambery Coulee, GNP
GinkgoG. sp.Chambery Coulee
JuglansJ. sp.Chambery CouleeSeeds
MacginitieaM. sp.Chambery Coulee, GNP
MagnoliaM. sp.Chambery Coulee, GNP
MarmarthiaM. sp.Chambery Coulee
MenispermitesM. sp.Chambery Coulee
MetasequoiaM. sp.Chambery Coulee
Parataxodium?IndeterminateChambery Coulee
PlatanusP. sp.Chambery Coulee, GNP
PopulusP. sp.Chambery Coulee, GNP
ProtophyllocladusP. sp.Chambery Coulee
PseudoctenisP. sp.Chambery Coulee
QuercusQ. sp.Chambery Coulee
RhusR. sp.Chambery Coulee, GNP
SabalitesS. sp.Chambery Coulee
SalixS. sp.Chambery Coulee, GNP
SapindusS. sp.GNP
SassafrasS. sp.GNP
SequoiaS. sp.Chambery Coulee
Taxodium?T?. sp.Chambery Coulee
ZelkovaZ. sp.Chambery Coulee

Images

A stunning view of our planet Earth as seen from the Apollo 17 spacecraft, showing Africa, Antarctica, and the Arabian Peninsula from space.
A fossilized Pleuroceras ammonite from the Jurassic period, showcasing the natural history of ancient marine life.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Frenchman Formation, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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