Mount Blanco
Mount Blanco is a small white hill — an erosional remnant — located on the eastern border of the Llano Estacado within Blanco Canyon in Crosby County, Texas.[1] With Blanco Canyon, it is the type locality of the Blanco Formation[2] of Texas and Kansas, as well as the Blancan fauna, which occurs throughout North America.[3][4]
| Mount Blanco | |
|---|---|
![]() Mount Blanco viewed from above  | |
| Highest point | |
| Elevation | 3,074 ft (937 m) | 
| Coordinates | 33°47′29″N 101°15′11″W | 
| Geography | |
![]() Mount Blanco  | |
| Geology | |
| Age of rock | Blancan, Quaternary | 
| Mountain type | Butte | 
Geology
    
The term "Blanco Canyon beds", later shortened to "Blanco beds", was first applied to this formation in 1890 by William F. Cummins of the Geological Survey of Texas.[5] The Blanco beds are considered to be of lacustrine origin – deposited in a Pleistocene lake basin set upon the Ogallala Formation of Pliocene age, which underlies the upper surface sediments of the Llano Estacado.[6] The thickness of the Blanco beds varies from around 22 to 26 m (72 to 85 ft) thick.[7] The formation mainly consists of light-gray, fine-grained mudstone, sandstone, and some conglomerate. These light-colored sediments contrast sharply with the locally rust-colored sediments of the Ogallala Formation.
Fossil fauna
    
All fossil fauna are from Mount Blanco modified from Dalquest (1975) unless otherwise noted.[8]
- Class Mammalia
- Order Perissodactyla
- Family Equidae
- †Equus cumminsi
 - †Equus simplicidens
 - †Nannippus peninsulatus
 
 
 - Family Equidae
 - Order Artiodactyla
- Family Antilocapridae
 - Family Camelidae
- †Blancocamelus meadei
 - †Camelops traviswhitei
 - †Canimartes cumminsi
 - †Titanotylopus spatulus
 
 - Family Cervidae
- †Odocoileus brachyodontus
 
 - Family Tayassuidae
- †Platygonus biccalcaratus
 - †Tanupolama blancoensis
 
 
 - Superorder Edentata
- Family †Glyptodontidae
- †Glyptotherium texanum
 
 - Family Megalonychidae
- †Megalonyx leptostomus
 
 - Family †Mylodontidae
- †Glossotherium chapadmalens
 
 
 - Family †Glyptodontidae
 - Order Lagomorpha
 - Order Proboscidea
- Family †Gomphotheriidae
- †Stegomastodon mirificus
 
 
 - Family †Gomphotheriidae
 - Order Carnivora
- Family Canidae
- †Borophagus diversidens
 - †Canis lepophagus
 
 - Family Felidae
- †Felis cf. lacustris
 - †Dinofelis palaeoonca
 - †Homotherium
 
 - Family Ursidae
 - Family Hyaenidae
- †Chasmaporthetes ossifragus
 
 - Family Mustelidae
- †Canimartes cummins
 - †Spilogale rexroadi
 
 
 - Family Canidae
 - Order Rodentia
- Family Sciuridae
- †Paenemarmota barbouri
 - Spermophilus sp.
 - †Spermophilius howelli
 
 - Family Geomyidae
- Geomys sp.
 
 - Family Heteromyidae
- †Perognathus parlettensis
 - †Perognathus rexroadensis
 - †Prodipomys centralis
 
 - Family Cricetidae
- Baiomys sp.
 - †Bensonomys sp.
 - †Neotoma quadriplicatus
 - Onychomys sp.
 - † Peromyscus kansasensis
 - Reithrodontomys sp.
 - †Sigmodon medius
 
 
 - Family Sciuridae
 
 - Order Perissodactyla
 - Class Reptilia
- Order Testudinata
- Family Testudinidae
- Geochelone sp.
 
 
 - Family Testudinidae
 
 - Order Testudinata
 
Images
    
Early photo of Mount Blanco (1891)[9]
Mount Blanco viewed from east (2002)
See also
    
    
References
    
- Holliday, V.T. 1988. Mt. Blanco revisited: soil-geomorphic implications for the ages of the Upper Cenozoic Blanco and Blackwater Draw Formations. Geology 16(6):505-508.
 - "Geologic Unit: Blanco". National Geologic Database. Geolex — Unit Summary. United States Geological Survey. Retrieved 2020-06-15.
 - Cope, E.D. 1892. A contribution to a knowledge of the fauna of the Blanco beds of Texas. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 44:226-229.
 - Schultz, G.E. 1977. Blancan and post-Blancan faunas in the Texas Panhandle. In: Schultz, G.E. (ed), Guidebook: Field conference on late Cenozoic biostratigraphy of the Texas Panhandle and adjacent Oklahoma: West Texas State University, Kilgore Research Center, Special Publication 1, pp. 105-145.
 - Cummins, W.F. 1890. The Permian of Texas and its overlying beds. In: Dumble, E.T. (ed), First annual report of the Geological Survey of Texas 1889, pp. 183-197.
 - Izett, G.A., Wilcox, R.E., and Borchardt, G. 1972. Correlation of a volcanic ash bed in Pleistocene deposits near Mount Blanco, Texas, with the Guaje Pumice Bed of the Jemez Mountains, NM. Quaternary Research 2:554-578.
 - Evans, G.L. 1948. Geology of the Blanco beds of West Texas. In: Colbert, E.H. (ed), Pleistocene of the Great Plains (symposium). Geological Society of America Bulletin No. 59, pp. 617-619.
 - Dalquest, W. W. 1975. Vertebrate Fossils from the Blanco Local Fauna of Texas. Occasional Papers The Museum Texas Tech University 30:1-52.
 - Cummins, W.F. 1892. Report on the geography, topography, and geology of the Llano Estacado or Staked Plains. In: Dumble, E.T. (ed), Third annual report of the Geological Survey of Texas 1891, pp. 129-223.
 

