Colorful outcrops of the Middle Oligocene
Titus Canyon Formation near Leadfield ghost town. In 1933,
paleontologists discovered many fossil mammalian remains in the
Titus Canyon, including a huge titantothere, oreodonts, tapirs,
squirrels, dogs, camels and horses. The bones occur in the lower
portions of the terrestrial, land-laid deposit, primarily in
an interval of reddish conglomeratic mudstone about 100 feet
thick, roughly 500 feet above the base of the formation.
In the vicinity of Leadfield, the Titus Canyon Formation reaches
a thickness of roughly 7,000 feet, consisting of varicolored
quartzite conglomerate, sandstone, calcareous mudstone, algal
limestone and tuffaceous sandstone. Although much of the
deposit is clearly of fluviatile deposition, the fine-grained
mudstones and algal limestone certainly suggest much calmer lacustrine
conditions. During Middle Oligocene times, the vast, arid Death
Valley region was a lush landscape of luxuriant vegetation, well-watered,
and thriving with many kinds of exotic, extinct mammals. |