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6 March 2025 Cambrian trilobites and associated fossils from the Uinta Mountains of Utah (USA)
John R. Foster, Frederick A. Sundberg, James W. Hagadorn
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Abstract

New trilobites from the Ophir Formation of the western Uinta Mountains in northern Utah represent some of the first identifiable and biostratigraphically useful fossils in the range, outside of Dinosaur National Monument. The fossils indicate that the Ophir Formation is similar in age to the Lodore Formation.

Fossils are rare in Cambrian strata of the Uinta Mountains of northeastern Utah, and are important because they can help integrate our understanding of laterally adjacent but discontiguous rock units, e. g., the Tintic Quartzite of Utah and the Lodore Formation of Utah-Colorado. New body fossils from strata previously mapped as Tintic or Cambrian Undifferentiated, but here interpreted as the Ophir Formation, include indeterminate hyoliths and hyolithids, brachiopods including a linguloid, and the trilobites Trachycheilus Resser, 1945 and Elrathiella Poulsen, 1927. The last two assign these strata to the Ehmaniella Biozone (uppermost Wuliuan Stage; Miaolingian Series) or traditional Laurentian middle Cambrian. These data, together with fossil occurrences elsewhere in Utah, require that the Tintic Quartzite was deposited prior to and/or during the early Wuliuan, and suggest that the unit could be correlative to much of the Lodore Formation of Utah and Colorado.

John R. Foster, Frederick A. Sundberg, and James W. Hagadorn "Cambrian trilobites and associated fossils from the Uinta Mountains of Utah (USA)," Journal of Paleontology 98(4), 452-459, (6 March 2025). https://doi.org/10.1017/jpa.2023.82
Accepted: 4 October 2023; Published: 6 March 2025
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