• Source: Gypsum Spring Formation
  • The Gypsum Spring Formation is a stratigraphical unit of Middle Jurassic age in the Williston Basin.
    It takes the name from Gypsum Spring in Wyoming, and was first described in outcrop in Freemont County by J.D. Love in 1939.


    Lithology


    The Gypsum Spring Formation is composed of massive white gypsum in the lower part, and alternating gypsum, red shale, dolomite and limestone.


    Distribution


    The Gypsum Spring Formation reaches a maximum thickness of 76 metres (250 ft) in central Wyoming. It occurs from the Black Hills in South Dakota through Wyoming and into southern Saskatchewan.


    Relationship to other units


    It is equivalent to the upper part of the Watrous Formation and the lower part of the Gravelbourg Formation in Saskatchewan.


    References

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