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  2. Red beds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_beds

    Primary red beds may be formed by the erosion and redeposition of red soils or older red beds, [3] but a fundamental problem with this hypothesis is the relative scarcity of red-colored source sediments of suitable age close to an area of red-bed sediments in Cheshire, England.

  3. Red Beds of Texas and Oklahoma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Beds_of_Texas_and_Oklahoma

    The most prolific fossil site in the red beds is the Geraldine Bonebed within the Nocona Formation of the Wichita Group. [6] During the Permian, the bonebed was the site of a freshwater pond. After a catastrophic event this became the burial site for a variety of terrestrial and marine animals. [ 15 ]

  4. Bloomsburg Formation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloomsburg_Formation

    The Silurian Bloomsburg Formation is a mapped bedrock unit in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York and Maryland. It is named for the town of Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania , in which it was first described. The Bloomsburg marked the first occurrence of red sedimentary rocks in the Appalachian Basin .

  5. Bedform - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bedform

    Current ripples preserved in sandstone of the Moenkopi Formation, Capitol Reef National Park, Utah, United States. A bedform is a geological feature that develops at the interface of fluid and a moveable bed, the result of bed material being moved by fluid flow. Examples include ripples and dunes on the bed of a river.

  6. Gulf of Mexico basin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulf_of_Mexico_basin

    Red beds, also referred to as non-marine clastic sequences, which are often red in color, have been found in wells drilled in the Gulf of Mexico which penetrated the Late-Triassic and Early-Jurassic strata, filling the extensional graben features. The Gulf of Mexico basin red beds are specifically named the Eagle Mills formation, located ...

  7. Graded bedding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graded_bedding

    Schematic illustrations of two styles of graded bedding: left: normal grading; right: inverse grading. Schematic illustrations of two styles of graded bedding: left: normal grading; right: coarse tail grading. In geology, a graded bed is a bed characterized by a systematic change in grain or clast size from bottom to

  8. Bed (geology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bed_(geology)

    A bedding surface is three-dimensional surface, planar or curved, that visibly separates each successive bed (of the same or different lithology) from the preceding or following bed. Where bedding surfaces occur as cross-sections, e.g., in a 2-dimensional vertical cliff face of horizontal strata, are often referred to as bedding contacts .

  9. Casselman Formation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casselman_Formation

    It is the uppermost of two formations in the Conemaugh Group, the lower being the Glenshaw Formation. The boundary between these two units is the top of the marine Ames Limestone. [2] The Conemaugh Group overlies the Upper Freeport coal bed of the Allegheny Formation and underlies the Pittsburgh coal seam of the Monongahela Group.