PALEOMAGNETISM OF THE MOENAVE FORMATION IN SW UTAH: IMPLICATIONS FOR MAGNETOSTRATIGRAPHY ACROSS THE TRIASSIC-JURASSIC BOUNDARY AND INCLINATION SHALLOWING
Western outcrops of the Moenave Formation consist of fluvial sandstones and mudstone of the basal Dinosaur Canyon Member, which is overlain by predominantly lacustrine sandstones and mudstones of the Whitmore Point Member. Typical thermal demagnetization behavior includes present day viscous overprint that unblocks at about 500°C followed by a characteristic vector component that unblocks by 670-680°C. Chemical demagnetization is most effective after a 30-minute soak in HCl, but specimens mostly disintegrate by 24 hours, suggesting remanence is mostly carried by pigmentary hematite cement.
The Dinosaur Canyon Member sampled to date from at both localities exhibits exclusively normal polarity directions consistent with expected directions for the latest Triassic to earliest Jurassic. Sandstones of the Whitmore Point Member have only been sampled at Leeds and also record normal polarity directions with the exception of one site that exhibits reverse polarity (D: 170.9, I: 13.9, α95: 22.8, n: 4). This reversal may be correlative to E23r recorded in Newark Basin strata and/or SA5r recorded at St. Audrie's Bay. However, these correlations are tentative given the lack of convincing biostratigraphic constraints.