Tecopa Lake Beds Explained

Tecopa Lake Beds
Type:Geologic formation
Age:Pleistocene
Period:Pleistocene
Prilithology:Mudstone
Namedfor:Lake Tecopa (prehistoric)
Region:Mojave Desert,
California
Country:United States

The Tecopa Lake Beds is a Blancan Pleistocene geologic formation in the Mojave Desert in eastern California. It is in the Tecopa area, east of Death Valley, in southeastern Inyo and northeastern San Bernardino County.[1]

The Lake Tecopa lake beds are the dry lake remnant of the formerly huge Pleistocene age Lake Tecopa, in the present day Amargosa River basin. It preserves fossils of the Quaternary period in the Cenozoic Era.[2]

Among the fossils found in the Tecopa Lake Beds is Capricamelus gettyi, a camelid.[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://specialpapers.gsapubs.org/search?fulltext=Lake+Tecopa&sortspec=date&submit=Submit&andorexactfulltext=phrase Geological Society of America.org: Lake Tecopa−related articles
  2. Web site: Fossilworks: Gateway to the Paleobiology Database. ((Various Contributors to the Paleobiology Database)). 17 December 2021.
  3. David P.. Whistler. David S.. Webb. 2005. New goatlike camelid from the Late Pliocene of Tecopa Lake Basin, California. Contributions in Science. English. 503. 0459-8113.