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Patuxent Formation

Patuxent Formation
Stratigraphic range: Early Cretaceous
Type Sedimentary
Unit of Potomac Group
Underlies Arundel Formation
Overlies basement rocks
Lithology
Primary sand, clay
Location
Region Atlantic coastal plain
Country U.S.A.
Extent Maryland, Washington D. C., Delaware, Virginia
Type section
Named for Patuxent River
Named by W. B. Clark, 1897

The Patuxent Formation is a Cretaceous geologic formation of the Atlantic coastal plain.

The Patuxent formation was first described by W. B. Clark in 1897. The formation is primarily unconsolidated sand and clay. The sand often contains kaolinized feldspar, making it an arkose. Clay lumps are common, and sand beds gradually transition to clay. Sandy beds may be crossbedded, which is evidence of shallow water origin.

The Patuxent is the basal unit of the Coastal Plain sedimentary formations and unconformably overlies the crystalline basement rocks. This underlying unconformity is the subsurface equivalent of the Atlantic Seaboard Fall line.

Propanoplosaurus, a nodosaurid known from a single natural cast and mold of a hatchling, was found recovered from rocks belonging to the Patuxent Formation in Maryland.

Fossil stegosaur tracks have been reported from the formation.

E. Dorf (1952) compared the flora identified in the Patuxent to that of the Wealden Flora in England studied by Albert Charles Seward.

Pollen spores have been identified in the formation by G. J. Brenner (1963).

The type locality is the upper and lower valleys of the Little Patuxent River and Big Patuxent River in Maryland.

The Patuxent is a notable aquifer in southern Maryland.

Biostratigraphic dating by Dorf (1952) confirmed Early Cretaceous (Neocomian) age.



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