The Jialingjiang Formation (嘉陵江组) is a geologic feature associated with the Sichuan Basin of China, generally underlying the area of the basin, with its origins dating to the Early Triassic period of geologic time, around a quarter of a billion years ago, and before. The Jialingjiang Formation is a geologic group feature upon the Yangtze Plate, which is a tectonic feature of the Earth's crust.
The Jialingjiang Formation is important to paleontologists or other people interested in ancient life forms due to the fossil evidence incorporated therein (such as for Eretmorhipis and other Ichthyosaur relatives). Also, scientific study of this formation group provides insight into Late Triassic tectonic inversion based on analysis of detrital zircon U–Pb chronology (involving the element uranium converting to lead over time due to radioactive decay). The Jialingjiang Formation is also of interest in history as it has been a source for humans to extract valuable economic goods such as salt and natural gas for many centuries.[1][2][3]
The history of the Jialingjiang Formation explains the origins of the hydrocarbon resources which have historically or in the future may be extracted. The primary hydrocarbon resource of the Sichuan Basin is natural gas.[4]
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^C. Xu. 1978. Lamellibranchiata. Palaeontological Atlas of Southwest China - Sichuan Volume 2:315-364
^CHEN Xiaohong, P. Martin SANDER, CHENG Long, WANG Xiaofeng.2013. A New Triassic Primitive Ichthyosaur from Yuanan, South China[J]. Acta Geologica Sinica(),87(3):672-677
^Liu, Q. L., Cheng, L., Stubbs, T. L., Moon, B. C., Benton, M. J., Yan, C. B., & Tian, L. (2023). Rapid neck elongation in Sauropterygia (Reptilia: Diapsida) revealed by a new basal pachypleurosaur from the Lower Triassic of China. BMC ecology and evolution, 23(1), 44. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12862-023-02150-w
^CHEN Xiaohong, P. Martin SANDER, CHENG Long, WANG Xiaofeng.2013. A New Triassic Primitive Ichthyosaur from Yuanan, South China[J]. Acta Geologica Sinica(),87(3):672-677
^Cheng, Long; Motani, Ryosuke; Jiang, Da-Yong; Yan, Chun-bo; Tintori, Andrea; Rieppel, Olivier (2019). "Early Triassic marine reptile representing the oldest record of unusually small eyes in reptiles, indicating non-visual prey detection". Scientific Reports. 9 (1): 152. Bibcode:2019NatSR...9..152C. doi:10.1038/s41598-018-37754-6. PMC 6345829. PMID 30679783.
^X.-C. Wu, L.-J. Zhao, and T. Sato, S.-X. Gu, X.-S. Jin. 2016. A new specimen of Hupehsuchus nanchangensis Young, 1972 (Diapsida, Hupehsuchia) from the Triassic of Hubei, China. Historical Biology 28(1-2):43-52
^C.-C. Young. 1965. On the new nothosaurs from Hupeh and Kweichou, China. Vertebrata PalAsiatica 9(4):337-356
^Chen, X. H., Motani, R., Cheng, L., Jiang, D. Y., & Rieppel, O. (2014). A small short-necked hupehsuchian from the lower Triassic of Hubei Province, China. PloS one, 9(12), e115244. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0115244
^Chen, X. H., Motani, R., Cheng, L., Jiang, D. Y., & Rieppel, O. (2014). A carapace-like bony 'body tube' in an early triassic marine reptile and the onset of marine tetrapod predation. PloS one, 9(4), e94396. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0094396
^A. S. Wolniewicz, Y. Shen, Q. Li, Y. Sun, Y. Qiao, Y. Chen, Y.-W. Hu and J. Liu. 2023. An armoured marine reptile from the Early Triassic of South China and its phylogenetic and evolutionary implications. eLife 12(e83163)