Two Medicine Formation

{{short description|Geological formation in Montana, United States and Alberta, Canada}}

{{Infobox rockunit

| name = Two Medicine Formation

| image = Two Medicine.jpg

| caption = Outcrop of the Two Medicine Formation near "Egg Mountain" in northern Montana

| type = Geological formation

| age = Campanian
~{{fossilrange|82.4|74.4}}

| period = Campanian

| prilithology = Sandstone

| otherlithology =

| namedfor = Two Medicine River

| namedby = Stebinger

| year_ts = 1914

| region = Montana, Alberta

| country = United States, Canada

| coordinates = {{Coord|48|04|27|N|112|17|58|W|name=Two Medicine|display=inline}}

| paleocoordinates = {{Coord|55.3|N|77.8|W|name=Two Medicine|display=inline}}

| unitof =

| subunits =Rock City Member, Shields Crossing Member, Hagans Crossing Member, Flag Butte Member

| underlies = Bearpaw Shale

| overlies = Virgelle Sandstone

| thickness = {{convert|600|m|ft|abbr=on}} (western portion)

| extent =

| area =

| map = {{Location map+ | United States#Montana

| relief = 1

| width = 250

| float = center

| places =

{{Location map~ | United States#Montana

| lat_deg = 48.1

| lon_deg = -112.3

| mark = Lightgreen pog.svg

| marksize = 10

}}

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| map_caption =

}}

The Two Medicine Formation is a geological formation, or rock body, in northwestern Montana and southern Alberta that was deposited between 82.4 Ma and 74.4 Ma, during Campanian (Late Cretaceous) time. It crops out to the east of the Rocky Mountain Overthrust Belt, and the western portion (about {{convert|600|m|ft|abbr=|disp=or}} thick) of this formation is folded and faulted while the eastern part, which thins out into the Sweetgrass Arch, is mostly undeformed plains. Below the formation are the nearshore (beach and tidal zone) deposits of the Virgelle Sandstone, and above it is the marine Bearpaw Shale. Throughout the Campanian, the Two Medicine Formation was deposited between the western shoreline of the Late Cretaceous Interior Seaway and the eastward advancing margin of the Cordilleran Overthrust Belt. The Two Medicine Formation is mostly sandstone, deposited by rivers and deltas.

History of research

In 1913, a US Geological Survey crew headed by Eugene Stebinger and a US National Museum crew headed by Charles Gilmore worked together to excavate the first dinosaur of the formation. Stebinger was the first to identify the Two Medicine Formation and formally described the first fossils in a scientific paper published in 1914. Gilmore returned to the Formation in 1928 and 1935. During this time frame only three species were named and of these only Styracosaurus ovatus and Edmontonia rugosidens are still regarded as valid. Barnum Brown prospected the formation in 1933, but found nothing significant. Both of their research were interrupted by World War II. In 1977, Trexler reports finding hadrosaur remains west of Choteau, Montana. During the next year baby hadrosaurs were discovered. In 1979, Horner and Makela referred these hadrosaur bones to Maiasaura peeblesorum. The announcement attracted renewed scientific interest to the formation and many new kinds of dinosaurs were discovered. More nesting sites were discovered later, including the Devil's Coulee site yielding Hypacrosaurus stebingeri in southern Alberta in 1987.

Geology

The loosely consolidated fine grain sediments composing the formation allow for fast plant growth in badland areas, limiting the number of exposed outcrops. Paleosols, fluvial deposits and bentonitic layers are common in the Two Medicine Formation.

= Age =

The Two Medicine Formation spans from 82.4 to 74.4 Ma, nearly the entire length of the Campanian stage. The age of the different members of the formation are as follows:

  • Rock City Member: 82.4-80.8 Ma
  • Shields Crossing Member: 80.8-80.2 Ma
  • Hagans Crossing Member: 80.2-77 Ma
  • Flag Butte Member: 77-74.8 Ma

= Equivalents =

There are several equivalents to the Two Medicine Formation, as with many geologic formations (most of which are named after their type locality). The Sweetgrass Arch in Montana divides the Two Medicine from the Judith River Formation, Bearpaw Shale, Claggett Shale, and Eagle Sandstone. Across the Canada–United States border, the Two Medicine Formation correlates to the Belly River Group in southwest Alberta, and the Pakowki Formation eastward.

= Stratigraphy =

The Two Medicine overlies the Virgelle Sandstone, which formed from the beach sands exposed on northern and western shores of the receding Colorado Sea. A Cretaceous Interior Seaway transgression submerged the area briefly early on in Two Medicine history leaving anomalous paralic sediments and isolated shale bodies about 100 m above the base of the formation. The Middle portion of the two medicine formation is about 225 m thick, deposited while the Clagette Sea was receding and the Bearpaw Sea transgressing. This portion is stratigraphically equivalent to the Judith River Formation and Judith River Group. The sediments are mainly bentonitic siltstones and mudstones with "occasional sandstone lenses." These sediments are thought to be the remains of a coastal plain "far removed" from the interior sea. The upper portion is about one half of the formation. Its sediments are similar to the middle portions but punctuated by extensive red beds and caliche horizons. The uppermost 80 m were deposited after the inundation of the Judith River equivalent sediments by the Bearpaw Sea. They are thought to have been deposited in only 500,000 years. Bentonitic ash is common in the Two Medicine. To the south extrusive volcanic activity occurred in association with the Boulder Batholith collectively called the Elkhorn Volcanics.

= Taphonomy =

Most of the vertebrate fossils are preserved by CaCo3 permineralization. This type of preservation preserves high levels of detail, even down to the microscopic level. However, it also leaves specimens vulnerable to weathering when exposed to the surface.

Paleoenvironment

= Climate =

File:Maiasaur Pano-v1.jpg walking along a creek-bed in Two Medicine Formation. Shown are the region's typical conifer, fern and horsetail vegetation, and a volcano erupting in the distance is evocative of the ash layers found in the Two Medicine Formation.]]

The Two Medicine Formation was deposited in a seasonal, semi-arid climate with possible rainshadows from the Cordilleran highlands. This region during the Campanian experienced a long dry season and warm temperatures. Lithologies, invertebrate faunas, and plant and pollen data support the above interpretation. The extensive red beds and caliche horizons of the upper Two Medicine are evidence of at least seasonally arid conditions. Some of the dinosaurs from the formation have been speculated to have shown signs of drought-related death.

= Elevation =

A more upland environment existed in the south of the Two Medicine Formation. Streams had a northeasterly flow away from these southwestern uplands. The southern part of the Two medicine formation grades into brackish water siltstone/sandstone series called the Horsethief Formation. The sediments of the Horsethief represent shallower water deposits than the Bearpaw Shale adding further evidence of higher elevation areas existing in the south.

Egg Mountain site

Egg Mountain, which is near Choteau, Montana, was discovered in 1977 by Marion Brandvold, owner of the Trex Agate Rock Shop in Bynum, Montana, who discovered the bones of juvenile dinosaurs at this site. It is a colonial nesting site on the Willow Creek Anticline in the Two Medicine Formation that is famous for its fossil eggs of Maiasaura, which demonstrated for the first time that at least some dinosaurs cared for their young. The eggs were arranged in dug-out earthen nests, each nest about a parent's body length from the next, and baby dinosaurs were also found with skeletons too cartilaginous for them to walk - similar to those of altricial (helpless) baby birds. The parent(s) must then have brought food to the young, and there is plant matter in the nests that may be evidence of either this or for incubation of the eggs. Maiasaura also grew extremely fast, at rates comparable to modern birds. Skeletons of Orodromeus and skeletons and eggs of Troodon were also found at Egg Mountain.

Biostratigraphy

File:Achelousaurus BW.jpg]]

Most dinosaur-bearing rock formations do not contain multiple distinct faunas at different positions within the formation's stratigraphic column. Usually the lower sediments of a given formation will contain the same kinds of dinosaurs as the upper sediments, or the species composition changes only gradually. However, some researchers had argued that the Two Medicine Formation was an exception, preserving multiple distinct dinosaur faunas.

Later research came to find that the supposedly distinct dinosaur faunas at different levels of the formations were more similar than had been previously thought. While the dinosaur fauna of the lower and middle sections Two Medicine was apparently diverse, the quality of preservation was low and few of these remains can be referred to individual species. The middle Two Medicine is a better source of fossils, but still poor overall. This makes it difficult to argue that these sections of the formation preserve distinct faunas.

The upper portion of the formation is more diverse and preserves better quality fossils. However, many of the taxa that supposedly distinguished it as a separate fauna have since been found in older sediments. In particular, Gryposaurus latidens and Hypacrosaurus have been found to coexist with Maiasaura. Further, there are fossil teeth that seem to show the presence of certain taxa are unbroken throughout the whole formation.

Nevertheless, some true changes in faunal composition seem to occur in the upper Two Medicine. The appearance of Maiasaura in the formation precedes the arrival of a diverse variety of other ornithischians. According to David Trexler, thorough examination of strata found along the Two Medicine River (which exposes the entire upper half of the Two Medicine Formation) indicates that the apparent diversification was a real event rather than a result of preservational biases.

The timeline below follows the stratigraphic chart presented by Horner et al. 2001.Horner, J. R., Schmitt, J. G., Jackson, F., & Hanna, R. (2001). Bones and rocks of the Upper Cretaceous Two Medicine-Judith River clastic wedge complex, Montana. In Field trip guidebook, Society of Vertebrate Paleontology 61st Annual Meeting: Mesozoic and Cenozoic Paleontology in the Western Plains and Rocky Mountains. Museum of the Rockies Occasional Paper (Vol. 3, pp. 3-14).

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Dinosaurs

Some of the dinosaurs from the formation have been speculated to show signs of drought related death. Very few articulated dinosaurs have been found in the formation; most specimens are isolated, bone bed, poorly preserved or broken remains. Early studies assumed that the Two Medicine Formation would have the same dinosaurs as the Judith River Formation. It was only in 1978, that it was discovered that the formation had endemic dinosaurs. Even some genera regarded as wide-ranging predators exhibited a species difference between the Two Medicine and other formations. No ecological barriers have been postulated apart from upland/lowland habitat preference differences between the Two Medicine and Judith River Formation. There is no unequivocal evidence for intermingling between the wildlife of the Two Medicine and geographically adjacent contemporary formations. Dinosaur remains are more common in the upper part of the Two Medicine.

= Ankylosaurs =

class="wikitable" align="center"
colspan="7" align="center" | Ankylosaurs of the Two Medicine Formation
GenusSpeciesLocationStratigraphic positionMaterialNotesImages
Edmontonia"3.11 Montana, United States; 6. Upper Two Medicine Formation". in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 583.

| E. rugosidens

|

  • Landslide Butte
  • Two Medicine River

| Flag Butte Member

| A skull with right mandible, cervical vertebrae, dorsal vertebrae, sacral vertebrae, caudal vertebrae, ribs, partial right ilium, left and right ischia, right pubis and osteoderms.

| A nodosaurid also known from the Horseshoe Canyon Formation and Dinosaur Park Formation.

| File:Edmontonia_rugosidens_armour_AMNH_5381.jpg

rowspan="2" style="background:#f3e9f3;" | Euoplocephalus

| style="background:#f3e9f3;" | E. tutus

| style="background:#f3e9f3;" |

| style="background:#f3e9f3;" | Flag Butte Member

| style="background:#f3e9f3;" |

| style="background:#f3e9f3;" | Misclassified, actually represent Scolosaurus

|

style="background:#f3e9f3;" | Indeterminate

| style="background:#f3e9f3;" |

  • Landslide Butte
  • Two Medicine River

| style="background:#f3e9f3;" | Flag Butt Member

| style="background:#f3e9f3;" |

| style="background:#f3e9f3;" | Misclassified, probably Scolosaurus

|

style="background:#E6E6E6;" | Oohkotokia{{Cite journal |last1=Penkalski |first1=P. |year=2013 |title=A new ankylosaurid from the late Cretaceous Two Medicine Formation of Montana, USA |journal=Acta Palaeontologica Polonica |volume=59 |issue=3 |pages=617–634 |doi=10.4202/app.2012.0125|doi-access=free }}

| style="background:#E6E6E6;" | O. horneri

| style="background:#E6E6E6;" |

| style="background:#E6E6E6;" | Flag Butte Member

| style="background:#E6E6E6;" |[Four] skulls, cervical vertebra, proximal caudal vertebra, ribs partial scapula, distal humerus, a left scapulocoracoid, ischia, [two] tail clubs, cervical half-ring, osteoderms, fragments and an undescribed specimen.

| style="background:#E6E6E6;" | Penkalski (2013) referred to Oohkotokia all ankylosaurine specimens from this formation. Arbour and Currie (2013) later referred Oohkotokia to Scolosaurus.{{Cite journal |last1=Arbour |first1=Victoria M. |last2=Currie |first2=Philip J. |date=2013-05-08 |title=Euoplocephalus tutus and the Diversity of Ankylosaurid Dinosaurs in the Late Cretaceous of Alberta, Canada, and Montana, USA |journal=PLOS ONE |volume=8 |issue=5 |pages=e62421 |doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0062421 |doi-access=free |issn=1932-6203 |pmc=3648582 |pmid=23690940|bibcode=2013PLoSO...862421A }}

| File:Oohkotokia_skull.jpg

Scolosaurus{{cite journal |last1=Arbour |first1=Victoria M. |last2=Currie |first2=Philip J. |date=8 May 2013 |title=Euoplocephalus tutus and the Diversity of Ankylosaurid Dinosaurs in the Late Cretaceous of Alberta, Canada, and Montana, USA |journal=PLOS ONE |volume=8 |issue=5 |pages=e62421 |doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0062421 |pmid=23690940 |pmc=3648582|bibcode=2013PLoSO...862421A |doi-access=free }}

| S. cutleri

|

| Flag Butte Member

| [Four] skulls, cervical vertebra, proximal caudal vertebra, ribs partial scapula, distal humerus, a left scapulocoracoid, ischia, [two] tail clubs, cervical half-ring, osteoderms, fragments and an undescribed specimen.

| An ankylosaurine ankylosaurid. These remains were previously considered to represent Euoplocephalus and then referred to Oohkotokia before being placed in Scolosaurus.

| File:Oohkotokia_horneri.jpg

= Avialans =

class="wikitable" align="center"
colspan="7" align="center" | Avialans of the Two Medicine Formation
GenusSpeciesLocationStratigraphic positionMaterialNotesImages
Gettyia{{Cite journal |last1=Atterholt |first1=Jessie |last2=Hutchison |first2=J. Howard |last3=O’Connor |first3=Jingmai K. |year=2018 |title=The most complete enantiornithine from North America and a phylogenetic analysis of the Avisauridae |journal=PeerJ |volume=6 |pages=e5910 |doi=10.7717/peerj.5910 |pmid=30479894 |pmc=6238772 |doi-access=free }}

| G. gloriae

|

| Upper

| "Tarsometatarsus""Table 11.1". in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 212.

| An avisaurid enantiornithean

|

= Ceratopsians =

class="wikitable" align="center"
colspan="7" align="center" | Ceratopsians of the Two Medicine Formation
GenusSpeciesLocationStratigraphic positionMaterialNotesImages
Achelousaurus

| A. horneri

| Landslide Butte

| Upper Flag Butte Member

| "[Three] partial skulls, [one] partial skeleton.""Table 23.1". in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 495.

| A centrosaurine ceratopsid

| File:Achelousaurus dinosaur.png

style="background:#E6E6E6;" | Brachyceratops

| style="background:#E6E6E6;" | B. montanensis

| style="background:#E6E6E6;" |

| style="background:#E6E6E6;" | Flag Butte Member

| style="background:#E6E6E6;" | "[Six] partial skulls, skeletons, subadult."

| style="background:#E6E6E6;" | A centrosaurine ceratopsid. Might be a juvenile Styracosaurus

| File:Brachyceratops BW.jpg

Cerasinops

| C. hodgskissi{{cite journal|last1=Chinnery |first1=Brenda J. |last2=Horner |first2=John R. |year=2007 |title=A New Neoceratopsian Dinosaur Linking North American and Asian Taxa |journal=Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology |volume=27 |issue=3 |pages=625–641 |doi=10.1671/0272-4634(2007)27[625:anndln]2.0.co;2 |s2cid=86091277 }}

|

| Lower Hagans Crossing Member

|

| A leptoceratopsid

| File:Cerasinops BW.jpg

Einiosaurus

| E. procurvicornis

| Landslide Butte

| Upper Flag Butte Member

| "[Three] adult skulls, juvenile and subadult cranial and postcranial elements."

| A centrosaurine ceratopsid

| File:Einiosaurus BW.jpg

Prenoceratops

| P. pieganensis

|

| Upper Flag Butte Member

|

| A leptoceratopsid

| File:Prenoceratops BW.jpg

Stellasaurus{{cite journal | title=A new, transitional centrosaurine ceratopsid from the Upper Cretaceous Two Medicine Formation of Montana and the evolution of the 'Styracosaurus-line' dinosaurs | last1=Wilson | first1=John P. | last2=Ryan | first2=Michael J. | last3=Evans | first3=David C. | journal= Royal Society Open Science| year=2020 | volume=7 | issue=4 | page=200284 | doi=10.1098/rsos.200284| pmid=32431910 | pmc=7211873 | bibcode=2020RSOS....700284W | doi-access=free }}

| S. ancellae

| Landslide Butte

| Flag Butte Member

| "Nasal horn and fragmentary parietal frill."

| A centrosaurine ceratopsid

| File:Stellasaurus parietal.jpg

Styracosaurus{{Cite journal |first1=R.B. |last1=Holmes |first2=W.S. |last2=Persons |first3=B. |last3=Singh Rupal |first4=A. |last4=Jawad Qureshi |first5=P.J. |last5=Currie |year=2020 |title=Morphological variation and asymmetrical development in the skull of Styracosaurus albertensis |journal=Cretaceous Research |doi=10.1016/j.cretres.2019.104308 |volume=107 |page=104308|bibcode=2020CrRes.10704308H |s2cid=210260909 }}

| S. ovatus

|

| Flag Butte Member

| Fragmentary parietal frill.

| A centrosaurine ceratopsid

| File:Rubeosaurus_ovatus.jpg

= Non-avialan eumaniraptorans =

class="wikitable" align="center"
colspan="7" align="center" | Non-avialan eumaniraptorans of the Two Medicine Formation
GenusSpeciesLocationStratigraphic positionMaterialNotesImages
Bambiraptor

| B. feinbergorum

|

| Flag Butte Member

| "Almost complete skull and postcrania,""Table 10.1". in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 198. type specimen

| A saurornitholestine dromaeosaur

| File:Bambiraptor reconstruction.jpg

Dromaeosaurus"3.11 Montana, United States; 2. Lower Two Medicine Formation". in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Pages 582-583.

| Indeterminate

|

| Hagans Crossing Member

|

|

| File:Dromaeosaurus Restoration.png

Richardoestesia

| Indeterminate

|

| Flag Butte Member

| Teeth

|

|

Saurornitholestes

| Indeterminate

|

  • "Choteau/Bynum"
  • Landslide Butte
  • Two Medicine River

|

  • Flag Butte Member
  • Hagans Crossing Member

| Partial skeleton, isolated pedal elements

| A saurornitholestine dromaeosaur

| File:Saurornitholestes digging Burrows wahweap.jpg

Troodon{{Cite journal |last=Varricchio |first=David J. |last2=Hogan |first2=Jason D. |last3=Gardner |first3=Jacob D. |date=2025-05-13 |title=Troodontid specimens from the Cretaceous Two Medicine Formation of Montana (USA) and the validity of Troodon formosus |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-paleontology/article/troodontid-specimens-from-the-cretaceous-two-medicine-formation-of-montana-usa-and-the-validity-of-troodon-formosus/3E58F1FDA3FE53DE569E0D0B20E79F22?utm_campaign=shareaholic&utm_medium=twitter&utm_source=socialnetwork |journal=Journal of Paleontology |language=en |pages=1–22 |doi=10.1017/jpa.2024.67 |issn=0022-3360|url-access=subscription |doi-access=free }}

| formosus?

|

| Flag Butte Member

| Partial skulls, several vertebrae, ribs, gastralia, chevrons, a sacrum, partial pelvis, and partial fore and hind limbs

|The remains are controversial, typically assigned to Troodon, but later studies suggested that the genus may be dubious. However, it has been proposed that these remains do indeed belong to Troodon formosus, and that one specimen should probably serve as the neotype.

|

= Ornithopods =

An unidentified lambeosaurine has been collected from the same stratigraphic placement, west of Bynum, and is in preparation at The Montana Dinosaur Center

class="wikitable" align="center"
colspan="7" align="center" | Ornithopods and parksosaurs of the Two Medicine Formation
GenusSpeciesLocationStratigraphic positionMaterialNotesImages
Acristavus{{cite journal |last1=Gates |first1=T.A. |last2=Horner |first2=J.R. |last3=Hanna |first3=R.R. |last4=Nelson |first4=C.R. |year=2011 |title=New unadorned hadrosaurine hadrosaurid (Dinosauria, Ornithopoda) from the Campanian of North America |journal=Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology |volume=31 |issue=4 |pages=798–811 |doi=10.1080/02724634.2011.577854 |bibcode=2011JVPal..31..798G |s2cid=8878474 }}

| A. gagslarsoni

|

| Lower Hagans Crossing Member{{cite journal |doi=10.1130/B37498.1 |title=Updating the Upper Cretaceous (Campanian) Two Medicine Formation of Montana: Lithostratigraphic revisions, new CA-ID-TIMS U-Pb ages, and a calibrated framework for dinosaur occurrences |date=2024 |last1=Rogers |first1=Raymond R. |last2=Horner |first2=John R. |last3=Ramezani |first3=Jahandar |last4=Roberts |first4=Eric M. |last5=Varricchio |first5=David J. |journal=Geological Society of America Bulletin }}

|

| A saurolophine hadrosaur

|

Glishades

| G. ericksoni

|

|

|

| A hadrosauroid{{Cite journal |last=Prieto-Márquez |first=Albert |year=2010 |title=Glishades ericksoni, a new hadrosauroid (Dinosauria: Ornithopoda) from the Late Cretaceous of North America |journal=Zootaxa |volume=2452 |issue=1 |pages=1–17 |url=http://mapress.com/zootaxa/2010/f/z02452p017f.pdf|doi=10.11646/zootaxa.2452.1.1 }} or an indeterminate juvenile saurolophine hadrosaur.{{Cite journal |last1=Campione |first1=Nicolás E. |last2=Brink |first2=Kirstin S. |last3=Freedman |first3=Elizabeth A. |last4=McGarrity |first4=Christopher T. |last5=Evans |first5=David C. |year=2012 |title=Glishades ericksoni, an indeterminate juvenile hadrosaurid from the Two Medicine Formation of Montana: implications for hadrosauroid diversity in the latest Cretaceous (Campanian-Maastrichtian) of western North America |journal=Palaeobiodiversity and Palaeoenvironments |volume=93 |issue=1 |pages=65–75 |doi=10.1007/s12549-012-0097-1|s2cid=128568454 }}

|

rowspan="2" | Gryposaurus"3.11 Montana, United States; 2. Lower Two Medicine Formation" and "3.11 Montana, United States; 6. Upper Two Medicine Formation". in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Pages 582-583.

| G. latidens

| Two Medicine River

|

  • Lower Hagans Crossing Member

| "Several partial skulls and postcranial skeletons.""Table 20.1". in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 440. Also known from isolated teeth which may have been redeposited fossils, although this explanation is unlikely.

| A saurolophine hadrosaur. The isolated G. latidens teeth are a rare component of channel lag deposits in the middle portion of the formation.

| rowspan=2 | File:Gryposaurus BW.jpg

Indeterminate

|

| Flag Butte Member

|

|

Hypacrosaurus

| H. stebingeri

|

  • Landslide Butte
  • Two Medicine River

| Flag Butte Member

|

| A very abundant species of lambeosaurine hadrosaur.{{Cite journal|last=Varricchio|first=David J.|date=April 1995|title=Taphonomy of Jack's Birthday Site, a diverse dinosaur bonebed from the Upper Cretaceous Two Medicine Formation of Montana|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0031-0182(94)00084-l|journal=Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology|volume=114|issue=2–4|pages=297–323|doi=10.1016/0031-0182(94)00084-l|bibcode=1995PPP...114..297V |issn=0031-0182}}

| File:Hypracosaurus NT.png

Maiasaura

| M. peeblesorum

|

  • "Choteau/Bynum"
  • Two Medicine River

| Upper Hagans Crossing Member

| "More than [two hundred] specimens including articulated skull and postcrania, embryo to adult."

| A saurolophine hadrosaur. Choteau Maiasaura remains are found in higher strata than their Two Medicine River counterparts. It is the most common dinosaur found in the Egg Mountain locality.{{cite web |last1=Dawson |first1=John |title=Egg Mountain, the Two Medicine, and the Caring Mother Dinosaur |url=https://www.nps.gov/articles/mesozoic-egg-mountain-dawson-2014.htm |website=National Park Service |publisher=U. S. Department of the Interior |access-date=20 March 2021}}

| File:Maiasaura BW.jpg

Orodromeus

| O. makelai

| "Choteau/Bynum"

| Lacustrine Interval, Lower Flag Butte Member

|

| An orodromine thescelosaur which was the most common small herbivore in the Egg Mountain area.{{cite journal |last1=Hirsch |first1=Karl F. |last2=Quinn |first2=Betty |title=Eggs and eggshell fragments from the Upper Cretaceous Two Medicine Formation of Montana |journal=Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology |date=1990 |volume=10 |issue=4 |pages=491–511 |doi=10.1080/02724634.1990.10011832 |bibcode=1990JVPal..10..491H |url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/02724634.1990.10011832 |access-date=25 April 2021|url-access=subscription }}{{cite journal |last1=Horner |first1=John R. |last2=Weishampel |first2=David B. |title=A comparative embryological study of two ornithischian dinosaurs |journal=Nature |date=March 17, 1998 |volume=332 |issue=6161 |pages=256–257 |doi=10.1038/332256a0 |s2cid=4329316 |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/332256a0 |access-date=25 April 2021|url-access=subscription }}

| File:Orodromeus (pencil 2013).png

Prosaurolophus

| P. maximus

|

  • Landslide Butte
  • Two Medicine River

| Upper Flag Butte Member

| "Disarticulated, associated skull and postcrania pertaining to at least [four] individuals."

| A saurolophine hadrosaur. Prosaurolophus blackfeetensis, erected for Two Medicine fossils, is a synonym of P. maximus.{{cite journal |last1=McGarrity |first1=C. T. |last2=Campione |first2=N. E. |last3=Evans |first3=D. C. |year=2013 |title=Cranial anatomy and variation in Prosaurolophus maximus (Dinosauria: Hadrosauridae) |journal=Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society |volume=167 |issue=4 |pages=531–568 |doi=10.1111/zoj.12009 |doi-access=free }}

| File:Prosaurolophus Maximus.jpg

= Oviraptorosaurs =

The first find of an oviraptorosaur in Montana was an articular region from the lower jaw of Caenagnathus sternbergi, from the Two Medicine Formation, according to a 2001 paper by David J. Varrichio. This species had previously only been known from the Canadian province of Alberta. Varricchio observes that during the late Campanian, Alberta and Montana had very similar theropods despite significant differences in the types of herbivorous dinosaur faunas.

class="wikitable" align="center"
colspan="7" align="center" | Oviraptorosaurs of the Two Medicine Formation
GenusSpeciesLocationStratigraphic positionMaterialNotesImages
Chirostenotes"Table 5.1". in Varricchio (2001). Page 44.

| C. pergracilis

|

|

| Known from the articular region of a lower jaw, catalogued as MOR 1107

| Was previously referred to Caenagnathus sternbergi (a synonym of Chirostenotes)

|

= Tyrannosauroids =

class="wikitable" align="center"
colspan="7" align="center" | Tyrannosauroids of the Two Medicine Formation
GenusSpeciesLocationStratigraphic positionMaterialNotesImages
rowspan="2" | Daspletosaurus

| D. horneri

|

| Flag Butte Member

| Bonebed{{cite journal |last1=Carr |first1=Thomas D. |last2=Varricchio |first2=David J. |last3=Sedlmayr |first3=Jayc C. |last4=Roberts |first4=Eric M. |last5=Moore |first5=Jason R. |title=A new tyrannosaur with evidence for anagenesis and crocodile-like facial sensory system |journal=Scientific Reports |date=30 March 2017 |volume=7 |issue=1 |pages=44942 |doi=10.1038/srep44942 |pmid=28358353 |pmc=5372470|bibcode=2017NatSR...744942C }}

|

| File:Daspletosaurus_torosus_steveoc_flipped.jpg

D. wilsoni

|

|Flag Butte Member

|BonebedCurrie, Trexler, Koppelhus, Wicks and Murphy (2005). "An unusual multi-individual tyrannosaurid bonebed in the Two Medicine Formation (Late Cretaceous, Campanian) of Montana (USA)." P.p. 313-324 in Carpenter, K. (ed.), The Carnivorous Dinosaurs. III. Theropods as living animals.

|

|

Gorgosaurus

| G. sp

| "Choteau/Bynum"

| Flag Butte Member

|

|Includes TCM 2001.89.1., the undescribed skeleton

| File:Gorgosaurus.png

Teratophoneini

|Indeterminate

|

|

|Frontal{{Cite journal |last=Yun |first=Chan-gyu |date=2022-07-22 |title=PROBABLE JUVENILE FRONTAL OF DASPLETOSAURUS HORNERI (DINOSAURIA: THEROPODA) FROM THE TWO MEDICINE FORMATION OF MONTANA, WITH IMPLICATIONS FOR TYRANNOSAURID ONTOGENY |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.35463/j.apr.2023.01.01 |journal=Acta Palaeontologica Romaniae |issue=19 (1) |pages=3–11 |doi=10.35463/j.apr.2023.01.01 |issn=1842-371X|doi-access=free }}

|Phylogenetic analysis recovers it in Teratophoneini{{Cite journal |last1=Rivera-Sylva |first1=Héctor E. |last2=Longrich |first2=Nicholas R. |year=2024 |title=A New Tyrant Dinosaur from the Late Campanian of Mexico Reveals a Tribe of Southern Tyrannosaurs |url=https://www.mdpi.com/2813-6284/2/4/12 |journal=Fossil Studies |volume=2 |issue=4 |pages=245–272 |doi=10.3390/fossils2040012 |doi-access=free}}

|

Tyrannosaurus

|T. sp.

|

|Flag Butte Member{{Cite journal |last=Dalman |first=Sebastian G. |last2=Lucas |first2=Spencer G. |last3=Malinzak |first3=D. Edward |date=2018 |title=Tyrannosaurid teeth from the upper Cretaceous (Campanian) Two Medicine Formation of Montana |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/328676947 |journal=New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin |volume=79 |issue= |pages=125–139}}

|right lacrimal, isolated tooth{{Cite journal |last1=Urban |first1=Michael A. |last2=Lamanna |first2=Matthew C. |date=December 2006 |title=Evidence of a Giant Tyrannosaurid (Dinosauria: Theropoda) from the Upper Cretaceous (?Campanian) of Montana |url=http://www.bioone.org/doi/abs/10.2992/0097-4463%282006%2975%5B231%3AEOAGTD%5D2.0.CO%3B2 |journal=Annals of Carnegie Museum |language=en |volume=75 |issue=4 |pages=231–235 |doi=10.2992/0097-4463(2006)75[231:EOAGTD]2.0.CO;2 |issn=0097-4463|url-access=subscription }}

|More similar to Tyrannosaurini than other Campanian tyrannosaurids{{Cite journal |last=Scherer |first=Charlie Roger |date=January 11, 2025 |title=Multiple lines of evidence support anagenesis in Daspletosaurus and cladogenesis in derived tyrannosaurines |url=https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0195667125000035 |journal=Cretaceous Research |pages=106080 |doi=10.1016/j.cretres.2025.106080 |issn=0195-6671|url-access=subscription }}

|

{{paleobiota-key-compact}}

Other fauna

Many other fossil animals have been found, such as freshwater bivalves, gastropods, turtles, lizards such as Magnuviator, and champsosaurs. The multituberculate mammal Cimexomys has been found on Egg Mountain. The species Piksi barbarulna was described based on forelimb bones from the Two Medicine Formation; it was initially thought to be a bird, but subsequently it was reinterpreted as a pterosaur, likely a member of Ornithocheiroidea.{{cite journal |last1=Agnolin |first1=Federico L. |last2=Varricchio |first2=David |year=2012 |title=Systematic reinterpretation of Piksi barbarulna Varricchio, 2002 from the Two Medicine Formation (Upper Cretaceous) of Western USA (Montana) as a pterosaur rather than a bird |url=http://www.mnhn.fr/museum/front/medias/publication/48099_g2012n4a10.pdf |journal=Geodiversitas |volume=34 |issue=4 |pages=883–894 |doi=10.5252/g2012n4a10|s2cid=56002643 }} Azhdarchoid pterosaurs are also known from the Two Medicine Formation, including a very large, yet-unnamed azhdarchid, the estimated wingspan of which was {{convert|8|m|ft}}, and smaller Montanazhdarcho minor, a non-azhdarchid azhdarchoid.{{Cite web |last1=Naish |first1=Darren |url=http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/tetrapod-zoology/2013/01/30/new-azhdarchid-pterosaur-eurazhdarcho/|title=A new azhdarchid pterosaur: the view from Europe becomes ever more interesting |work=Tetrapod Zoology |date=January 30, 2013 |access-date=February 6, 2013}}{{cite journal|last=Carroll |first=N. |year=2015 |title=Reassignment of Montanazhdarcho minor as a non-azhdarchid member of the Azhdarchoidea |journal=Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, Programs and Abstracts |volume=104}} Insect and mammal burrows have also been discovered, as well as dinosaur coprolites.

See also

References

{{Reflist|refs=

"Abstract". Varricchio (2001); page 42.

"Abstract". Trexler (2001); page 298.

"Introduction". Trexler (2001); pages 298-299.

"Introduction". Trexler (2001); page 299.

"Previous Work". Trexler (2001); page 300.

"Introduction". Trexler (2001); pages 299-300.

"Geological Setting". Trexler (2001); pages 300-301.

"Geological Setting". Trexler (2001); page 301.

"Geological Setting". Trexler (2001); page 302.

"Two Medicine Fauna". Trexler (2001); page 302.

"Two Medicine Fauna". Trexler (2001); pages 302-303.

"Two Medicine Fauna". Trexler (2001); page 303.

"Two Medicine Fauna". Trexler (2001); page 304.

"Faunal Turnover, Migration, and Evolution". Trexler (2001); page 304.

"Faunal Turnover, Migration, and Evolution". Trexler (2001); page 306.

}}

= Bibliography =

  • Dodson, P., C.A. Forster, and S.D. Sampson. 2004. Ceratopsidae in Weishampel, D.B., P. Dodson, and H. Osmolska (eds.) The Dinosauria. 2nd Edition, University of California Press.
  • {{cite journal | last1 = Rogers | first1 = R.R. | year = 1990 | title = Taphonomy of three dinosaur bone beds in the Upper Cretaceous Two Medicine Formation of northwestern Montana: evidence for drought-related mortality | journal = PALAIOS | volume = 5 | issue = 5| pages = 394–413 | doi=10.2307/3514834| jstor = 3514834 | bibcode = 1990Palai...5..394R }}
  • Trexler, D., 2001, Two Medicine Formation, Montana: geology and fauna: In: Mesozoic Vertebrate Life, edited by Tanke, D. H., and Carpenter, K., Indiana University Press, pp. 298–309.
  • {{cite journal | last1 = Varricchio | first1 = D.J. | year = 1995 | title = Taphonomy of Jack's Birthday Site, a diverse dinosaur bonebed from the Upper Cretaceous Two Medicine Formation of Montana | journal = Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | volume = 114 | issue = 2–4| pages = 297–323 | doi=10.1016/0031-0182(94)00084-l| bibcode = 1995PPP...114..297V | url = http://doc.rero.ch/record/14441/files/PAL_E1625.pdf }}
  • Varricchio, D. J. 2001. Late Cretaceous oviraptorosaur (Theropoda) dinosaurs from Montana. pp. 42–57 in D. H. Tanke and K. Carpenter (eds.), Mesozoic Vertebrate Life. Indiana University Press, Indianapolis.
  • {{cite book |editor-last1=Weishampel |editor-first1=David B. |editor-last2=Dodson |editor-first2=Peter |editor-last3=Osmólska |editor-first3=Halszka |year=2004 |title=The Dinosauria, 2nd edition |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vtZFDb_iw40C |location=Berkeley |publisher=University of California Press |pages=1–880 |accessdate=2019-02-21 |isbn=0-520-24209-2}}

Category:Geologic formations of Alberta

Category:Geologic formations of Montana

Category:Upper Cretaceous Series of North America

Category:Cretaceous Alberta

Category:Cretaceous Montana

Category:Campanian Stage

Category:Sandstone formations of Canada

Category:Sandstone formations of the United States

Category:Fluvial deposits

Category:Deltaic deposits

Category:Ichnofossiliferous formations

Category:Ooliferous formations

Category:Fossiliferous stratigraphic units of North America

Category:Paleontology in Alberta

Category:Paleontology in Montana

Category:Glacier National Park (U.S.)