Scripps Formation

The Scripps Formation is a geologic formation in coastal San Diego County, California.[1][2][3]

Scripps Formation
Stratigraphic range: Eocene
Typegeologic formation
UnderliesFriars Formation
OverliesArdath Shale
Thickness0–56 m (0–184 ft)
Location
RegionSan Diego County, California
Country United States
Type section
Named forScripps Pier

It is named for its type section north of the Scripps Pier, on the north side of the Blacks Canyon mouth.[2]

Geography

It underlies much of the area from east of Del Mar on the north to the mouth of Mission Valley on the south, and extends north to the Encinitas area.[2] Along the coast, it can be seen from central Torrey Pines State Park to the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, in La Jolla.

In the north near Encinitas, it correlates with the upper Torrey Sandstone.[2]

Geology

It overlies the Ardath Shale, and underlies the Friars Formation.[2]

Sea level rose and fell often during this period of the Eocene Epoch in geologic history. About 42 million years ago, sea level rose again and more sand was deposited. Compressed and cemented, it makes the rock known as the Scripps Formation. This rock holds up the sea bluffs north of Moonlight Beach. Because the mudstone and siltstone of the Ardath Formation are softer and weaker layers, waves erode it and undermine the stronger Scripps Formation sandstone above it, as happens with the Del Mar Formations below Torrey Formations.[1][3]

Fossil content

Fossils are present but are less common in the Scripps Formation than in the underlying Ardath Shale.[2] Those it preserves date back to the Eocene Epoch of the Paleogene period, during the Cenozoic Era.[4]

gollark: ```ruststruct Monad;```A monad.
gollark: Promises are quite monadic.
gollark: Praise Rust, etc, etc.
gollark: Then use Rust.
gollark: Better than Go.

See also

References

  1. San-diego.us: San Diego Geology . accessed 7.7.2015
  2. Kennedy, Michael P. (1975). Geology of the San Diego metropolitan area, California. California Division of Mines and Geology.
  3. Geiconsultants.com: Geologic Formations of Western San Diego County, by Jeffrey D. Brown, R.G., C.E.G. − circa 1996.
  4. Various Contributors to the Paleobiology Database. "Fossilworks: Gateway to the Paleobiology Database". Archived from the original on 31 July 2014. Retrieved 8 July 2014.

Further reading

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