- Source: Sao Khua Formation
The Sao Khua Formation (Thai: หมวดหินเสาขัว) is a middle member of the Khorat Group. It consists of an alteration of pale red to yellowish-gray, fine to medium-grained sandstone and grayish-reddish brown siltstone and clay. Rare pale red to light gray conglomerates, containing carbonate pebbles, are also characteristic of this formation. This geological formation in Thailand dates to the Early Cretaceous age, specifically the Valanginian through Hauterivian stages.
Dinosaur remains are among the fossils that have been recovered from the formation.
Depositional environment
Baser on paleosols and lithostratigraphy, the Sao Khua Formation is believed to have been deposited in a warm to slightly cool semi-arid climate by a meandering river system. Geochemistry is indicative of a stable humid subtropical climate regime, and sedimentation is thought to have occurred in a floodplain setting which was fed by bedload-rich large meandering channels. Paleocurrent analysis suggests the sand channels at the time of deposition of the formation probably formed a braided channel environment.
Fossil content
= Amphibians
== Reptiles
=Dinosaurs
Sauropoda indet. 1 and 2
Lizards
Pseudosuchians
Pterosaurs
Turtles
= Fish
=Bony fish
Cartilaginous fish
= Invertebrates
=Bivalves
See also
List of dinosaur-bearing rock formations
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Sao Khua Formation
- Kinnareemimus
- Sao Khua sclerorhynchoid
- Phuwiangosaurus
- Vayuraptor
- 2024 in archosaur paleontology
- Siamosaurus
- Spinosauridae
- Phuwiangvenator
- List of Asian dinosaurs