Ichnology and sedimentology of the non-marine Frontier Formation (upper Cretaceous) of southwestern Montana
Date
2023
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Publisher
Montana State University - Bozeman, College of Letters & Science
Abstract
The Frontier Formation of southwestern Montana (USA) is comprised of rocks assigned to the early Upper Cretaceous (Cenomanian- Santonian), and has recently yielded a notable fossil record, mostly comprised of dinosaur tracks and invertebrate trace fossils. This fossil record lays within a poorly understood period of the Upper Cretaceous, also known as the middle Cretaceous, valued as critical to understand the evolution of terrestrial ecosystems in North America at the end of the Mesozoic Era. This study aims to describe and analyze preservation and distribution of the Frontier trace fossils record. Twelve stratigraphic sections are measured and sedimentology, taphonomy, and stratigraphic framework described for the main fossiliferous sites. Sixty-five dinosaur tracks and associated invertebrate traces are described. Three tracks are further analyzed by combining anatomical characters and track morphological features to infer a more specific producer. Photogrammetry, tridimensional models, and color elevation maps are generated to document significant specimens and to map two excavated track sites. A concise description and classification of a freshwater turtle is also included to enhance paleoecological and paleodepositional reconstructions. A Coniacian age is provided for the Frontier Formation, main fossiliferous sites. Sedimentology and fossil record suggest the establishment of a rich ecosystem in alluvial plains and wetlands extending between the offshoots of the uplifting Rocky Mountains to the east and the Cody Sea to the east. Facies distribution across the southwest-northeast transect suggests that fossil distribution and preservation is mainly controlled by autogenic and allogenic processes seen in foreland basin systems. Tracks and invertebrate trace fossils preservation was likely favored by high sedimentation rates and variations of the ground water table. Dinosaur track assemblage is comparable to those reported in other middle Cretaceous formations of western North America and include derived hadrosauriform ornithopods, ankylosaurians, and theropods. The integration of body fossil data would suggest the presence of a fauna that included elements (i.e. Neurankylus sp.) shared with Campanian and Maastrichtian formations, suggesting that the Coniacian ecosystems across southwestern Montana was likely undergoing a process of provincialisms as seen in North America at the end of the Cretaceous.