Calcari ad aptici e Saccocoma Formation

The Calcari ad aptici e Saccocoma Formation,[1] also known as the Saccocoma Formation (known in English as the Haptic limestones and Saccocoma Formation), is a geologic formation in Camponocecchio, Italy that dates back to the Tithonian (152 Ma) - it was first identified in 1976/1980,[2][3] and was named in 2002.[1] It was probably a marine shale due to the fossil content.[4] Fossils found there include ammonites, cnidarians and the ichthyosaur Gengasaurus, discovered in 1976.[5] Many of the fossils found in this formation are housed at the Spaelaeo-Palaeontologic Museum in Genga.

Calcari ad aptici e Saccocoma Formation
Stratigraphic range: Tithonian,
TypeGroup
Unit of'Calcari Diasprigni'
ThicknessUp to 30 metres (98 ft)
Lithology
PrimaryLimestone and sandstone
OtherChert
Location
RegionMarche
Country Italy
ExtentCamponocecchio and Genga
Type section
Named byFabio Galluzzo & Massimo Santantonio (2002)[1]
LocationCamponocecchio
Year defined1976/1980[2]

Paleofauna

Indeterminate ammonites and cnidarians are known from the formation.[5]

References

  1. Galluzzo, F. & Santantonio, M. (2002). The Sabina Plateau: a new element in the Mesozoic palaeogeography of Central Apennines. Bollettino della Società Geologica Italiana S1, 561–88.
  2. Fastelli, C. & Nicosia, U. (1980). L'Ittiosauro di Genga (Ancona). In I vertebrati fossili italiani (eds Parisi, G. & Seppi, G.), pp. 95–101. Verona: Catalogo della Mostra.
  3. De Marinis, G. & Nicosia, U. (2000). L'Ittiosauro di Genga. Castelferretti, Ancona: Cassa di Risparmio di Fabriano e Cupramontana Edizioni, 220 pp.
  4. "Paleo Profile: The Genga Lizard". Scientific American. Retrieved 9 October 2020.
  5. Ilaria Paparella; Erin E. Maxwell; Angelo Cipriani; Scilla Roncacè; Michael W. Caldwell (2017). "The first ophthalmosaurid ichthyosaur from the Upper Jurassic of the Umbrian–Marchean Apennines (Marche, Central Italy)". Geological Magazine. 154 (4): 837–858. Bibcode:2017GeoM..154..837P. doi:10.1017/S0016756816000455. S2CID 132955874.
  6. G. A. Gill, M. Santantonio, and B. Lathuiliere. (2004). The depth of pelagic deposits in the Tethyan Jurassic and the use of corals: an example from the Apennines. Sedimentary Geology 166:311-334


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