Bell Canyon Formation

The Bell Canyon Formation is a Permian geologic unit in the western United States. The formation's Lamar Limestone Member of Guadalupe Mountains National Park has produced fossil holocephalan teeth.[1]

Footnotes

  1. "Guadalupe Mountains National Park," Hunt, Santucci, and Kenworthy (2006); page 64.
gollark: What a somewhat unique cosmic horror thing.
gollark: If the companies wanted to use them as handheld lasers they probably could quite easily.
gollark: Not to be thingy, but those are mostly just somewhat hard to obtain diode laser setups, and vast quantities of work is going into actually designing and fabricating those.
gollark: Who is apparently doing better than said companies at what?
gollark: I don't think that's physically possible.

References

  • Hunt, ReBecca K., Vincent L. Santucci and Jason Kenworthy. 2006. "A preliminary inventory of fossil fish from National Park Service units." in S.G. Lucas, J.A. Spielmann, P.M. Hester, J.P. Kenworthy, and V.L. Santucci (ed.s), Fossils from Federal Lands. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 34, pp. 63–69.
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