Hanson Formation

The Hanson Formation is a geologic formation on Mount Kirkpatrick, Antarctica. It is one of only two major dinosaur-bearing rock groups found on the continent of Antarctica to date; the other is the Snow Hill Island Formation and related formations from the Late Cretaceous of the Antarctic Peninsula. The formation has yielded only a handful of Mesozoic specimens so far and most of it is as yet unexcavated. Part of the of the Transantarctic Mountains, it is below the Prebble Formation and above the Falla Formation. The Formation is related to the Volcanic Activity Linked to the Karoo-Ferar eruptions on the Lower Jurassic. The climate of the zone was similar to the modern Southern Chile, Humid, with a temperature interval of 17–18 degrees.

Hanson Formation

The Hanson Formation is a geologic formation on Mount Kirkpatrick, Antarctica. It is one of only two major dinosaur-bearing rock groups found on the continent of Antarctica to date; the other is the Snow Hill Island Formation and related formations from the Late Cretaceous of the Antarctic Peninsula. The formation has yielded only a handful of Mesozoic specimens so far and most of it is as yet unexcavated. Part of the of the Transantarctic Mountains, it is below the Prebble Formation and above the Falla Formation. The Formation is related to the Volcanic Activity Linked to the Karoo-Ferar eruptions on the Lower Jurassic. The climate of the zone was similar to the modern Southern Chile, Humid, with a temperature interval of 17–18 degrees.