Myton Pocket (UFHNH collection)
Basic information
Sample name: Myton Pocket (UFHNH collection)

Reference: A. H. Hamblin. 1987. Paleogeography and paleoecology of the Myton Pocket, Uinta Basin, Utah (Uinta Formation-Upper Eocene). Brigham Young University Geology Studies 34(1):33-60 [ER 4149]
Geography
Country: United States

State: Utah


County: Uintah


Coordinate: 40.49° N, -111.87° W
Coordinate basis: stated in text

Scale: outcrop

Formation: Uinta

Time interval: Middle Eocene

Zone: Uintan

Max Ma: 43.45

Min Ma: 42.196

Age basis: paleomag

Geography comments: Hamblin's measured section at Myton Pocket is in the "SE1/4, SE1/4, SW1/4, of Section 6, T. 4 S, R. 1 E"
"in the lower part of the Myton Member (Uinta C)" and most of the fossils are from "between sandstones A and K" in the local section
there are numerous point localities within the section and around it (Fig. 18), including the Kay quarry
Myton Pocket is in chron 20n based on earlier paleomagnetic studies tied down by a date of 40.26 Ma for the Lapoint Ash (Kelly et al. 2012) (age estimates based on Ogg 2020)

Environment
Lithology: siliciclastic (mixed)

Taphonomic context: overbank deposit

Habitat comments: "The parent rock" of the fossils "is composed of grains of silt and clay" and the general lithology is "siltstone and shale"
the fossils are from "fine-grained delta plain deposits" representing "A distributary stream system on a delta plain environment" with "numerous avulsion-type paleochannel fills that are surrounded by argillaceous sediments representing the over-the-bank deposits", and they are found "between distributary stream channels"
there are coprolites "suggesting a possible feeding site or den"
"Mammalian remains have been found mostly as fragments of skulls and jaws with teeth" and "Some postcranial material has also been found... Occasionally partially articulated"

Methods
Life forms: rodents,ungulates,other small mammals

Sample size: 41 specimens

Museum: Utah Field House of Natural History

Sampling comments: there are "fishes, turtles and tortoises, crocodilians, and mammals. Turtles and tortoises are the most common vertebrate fossils" and the fishes include gar scales
the author collected during "the summer of 1980, during which attempts at screening small mammal fossils were unsuccessful", and catalog numbers suggest that these specimens are in the Utah Field House of Natural History collection
the catalog numbers specifically suggest that the collections may have been made in 1950, 1952, 1953, and 1980

Metadata
Sample number: 4610

Contributor: John Alroy

Enterer: John Alroy

Created: 2024-12-13 04:53:19

Modified: 2024-12-13 04:53:19

Abundance distribution
10 species
4 singletons
total count 41
geometric series index: 23.1
Fisher's α: 4.214
geometric series k: 0.7349
Hurlbert's PIE: 0.7677
Shannon's H: 1.8111
Good's u: 0.9048
Each square represents a species. Square sizes are proportional to counts.
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