Main dolomite
Main dolomite Hauptdolomit Stratigraphic range: Carnian & Norian ages, Late Triassic Epoch, Mesozoic Era | |
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Main Dolomite Formation, exposed in the Northern Limestone Alps. | |
Type | Geological formation |
Thickness | 0–2,200 metres (0–7,218 ft) |
Lithology | |
Primary | Dolomite (rock) |
Location | |
Region |
Limestone Alps and Apennines ranges, Central Europe |
Main dolomite (also Main Dolomite, German: Hauptdolomit, Italian: Dolomia Principale) is a lithostratigraphic unit in the Alps of Europe.
Geology
The formation is found in:
- the Northern Limestone Alps and Southern Limestone Alps of the Limestone Alps, a mountain system of the western and Central Eastern Alps.
- the Apennines in Italy
It is primarily made of dolomite rock, ranging 0–2,200 metres (0–7,218 ft) in thickness. The formation was deposited in shallow lagoons during the Late Carnian and Early Norian ages of the Late Triassic epoch in the Triassic Period, during the Mesozoic Era..
Fossils
Fossil prosauropod tracks have been reported from the formation.[1]
See also
References
Triassic Period | ||
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Lower/Early Triassic | Middle Triassic | Upper/Late Triassic |
Induan |Olenekian | Anisian | Ladinian | Carnian | Norian Rhaetian |
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