- Source: Mooreville Chalk
The Mooreville Chalk is a geological formation in North America, within the U.S. states of Alabama and Mississippi, which were part of the subcontinent of Appalachia. The strata date back to the early Santonian to the early Campanian stage of the Late Cretaceous. The chalk was formed by pelagic sediments deposited along the eastern edge of the Mississippi embayment. It is a unit of the Selma Group and consists of the upper Arcola Limestone Member and an unnamed lower member. Dinosaur, mosasaur, and primitive bird remains are among the fossils that have been recovered from the Mooreville Chalk Formation.
Fish
= Cartilaginous fish
== Bony fish
=Reptiles
= Dinosaurs
=Indeterminate hadrosaurid, nodosaurid, dinosaur egg, and ornithomimosaur fossils are known from Mooreville Chalk outcrops in Alabama. The nodosaurid remains most likely belong to a new taxon.
= Mosasaurs
== Plesiosaurs
=Very rare elasmosaurs are present in this formation.
= Pterosaurs
== Turtles
=See also
List of dinosaur-bearing rock formations
List of fossil sites
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Protostega
- Protostegidae
- Mooreville Chalk
- Enchodus
- Squalicorax
- Mosasaurus
- Prognathodon
- Ptychodus
- Prionochelys
- Wetumpka crater
- Tylosaurus
- Cretoxyrhina