Over almost the entire state, the rocks deposited at this time are very similar. Formation names may differ—Lykins, Moenkopi, Chinle, Ankareh, Wingate—but the rocks are almost universally fine-grained sandstones and shales with a red or pink color. They represent ancient coastal plain, dune, or delta deposits. Toward the western edge of the state they coarsen, and contain layers of [conglomerates] similar to the Triassic conglomerates of northern Arizona and Utah. These suggest that mountain-building was taking place west of here at that time.
There are virtually no [fossils] known from Triassic rocks in Colorado, although some fossil palm fronds have been found west of the San Juan Mountains, in the southwestern corner of the state.
Jurassic Period
(135-180 million years ago)
During the Jurassic Period, Colorado was still a low, flat desert area with intermittent streams flowing eastward over the surface of older sediments. The Navajo Sandstone, formed from dune sands, was deposited in the western part of the state. Streams flowing eastward from Utah brought fine sediments—silts and muds—to western Colorado, forming what is now the Carmel Formation. Near Canon City, coarse gravels bear witness to local uplift in Jurassic time. Both these gravels and the Carmel Formation were overlain by more dune sands, now hardened into the Entrada Sandstone.
In Late Jurassic time the Colorado area, which had been predominantly desert since Permian time, appears finally to have been submerged once more. Fine calcareous muds of the Curtis Formation, containing [ammonites], [belemnites], and other marine shellfish, show us that a shallow sea transgressed from the west over the wind-blown sands. This sea was, geologically speaking, of short duration—only a few million years. Bounded on almost all sides by desert, it seems to have dried up, depositing the gypsum that is now present in a thin layer along the Front Range between Denver and Canon City in the Ralston Formation.
At about this time, however, the climate underwent a major change. Deposits above the Ralston indicate an increasingly moist environment, the environment in which the Morrison Formation was deposited over most of Colorado and parts of the adjacent states of Kansas, Arizona, Utah, and Wyoming. The Morrison Formation is exposed in many places, and is characteristically composed of layers of fine, limy mud, brightly colored in streaks of red, brown, green, and blue. In most areas it is so soft that it becomes soil-covered; it is well exposed only in roadcuts or where it is protected from erosion by a “caprock” of harder sediments or [lava]. Spectacular outcrops can be seen in new roadcuts along U. S. Interstate highway 70 just west of Denver.
In this roadcut along U. S. Interstate 70 west of Denver, Jurassic and Cretaceous rocks are unusually well exposed in the Dakota [hogback]. Green and purple shales represent the dinosaur-bearing Morrison Formation. The Cretaceous Dakota Group forms the eastern, higher half of the cut. Black layers are carbon-rich clays of the South Platte Formation, frequently quarried locally for ceramic uses. (John Chronic photo)
[Fossil] dinosaur bones occur in great numbers in the Morrison Formation near the towns of Morrison and Canon City and at several other places in Colorado. Those at Canon City have been quarried extensively, and are now mounted in a number of museums in the United States. At Dinosaur National Monument, in eastern Utah and northwestern Colorado, many excellent remains have been found; those in Utah can be seen in place in the rock in a striking exhibit at the National Monument.