Sloan Canyon Formation

The Sloan Canyon Formation is a late Triassic geologic formation exposed in northeastern New Mexico. Fossil theropod tracks have been reported from the formation.

Description
The Sloan Canyon Formation consists of variegated reddish-brown, purple, and green mudstones, with some beds of siltstone and marl. It rests on the Travesser Formation and is overlain by the Sheep Pen Sandstone. Total thickness is 38-46 meters.

The formation is usually assigned to the Dockum Group. The proposal of Spencer G. Lucas and his collaborators to abandon the Dockum Group, possibly in favor of the Chinle Group, is highly controversial.

Fossils
A phytosaur skull was found in the Sloan Canyon Formation in 1939, establishing that it was a Triassic formation. The formation is part of one of the largest continuously mapped Triassic vertebrate tracksites, with the earliest studied exposures at Peacock Canyon. Ichnofossils (track fossils) include the archosaurs Brachychirotherium and Chirotherium, a possible therapsid, and the reptile Rhynchosauroides.

History of investigation
The beds now assigned to this unit were previously mistaken for Morrison Formation. The Sloan Canyon Formation was first named by B.H. Parker in 1930.