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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:San_Salvatore_Dolomite
rdfs:label
San Salvatore Dolomite
rdfs:comment
The San Salvatore Dolomite, sometimes known as the Salvatore Dolomite or San Salvatore Formation, is a Middle Triassic (late Anisian) geological formation in Switzerland and Italy. The primarily lithology is micritic dolomite with a high proportion of algal mounds (stromatolites). It corresponds to a thick warm-water carbonate platform on the northern edge of an island in what is now the Po Plain. This formation and its local equivalents are common in the hills around Lake Maggiore, Varese, and Lugano, preserving fossils of marine invertebrates such as ammonoids, gastropods, and bivalves. At its southernmost extent on Monte San Giorgio, only the lower part of the San Salvatore Dolomite is preserved. The middle and upper parts are replaced by the Besano Formation, , and , which were deposit
dbp:name
San Salvatore Dolomite
foaf:depiction
n13:Picswiss_TI-16-02.jpg
dct:subject
dbc:Dolomite_formations dbc:Geology_of_the_Alps dbc:Paleontology_in_Switzerland dbc:Geologic_formations_of_Italy dbc:Paleontology_in_Italy dbc:Triassic_System_of_Europe dbc:Geologic_formations_of_Switzerland dbc:Limestone_Alps dbc:Fossiliferous_stratigraphic_units_of_Europe dbc:Anisian_Stage
dbo:wikiPageID
68635962
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1060990417
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Besano_Formation dbr:Lombardy dbr:Ammonoidea dbc:Geology_of_the_Alps dbr:Fenera_Annunziata_Sandstone dbc:Dolomite_formations dbr:Piedmont dbc:Geologic_formations_of_Italy dbr:Stromatolite dbc:Paleontology_in_Switzerland dbc:Paleontology_in_Italy dbr:Italy dbr:Meride_Limestone dbr:Lake_Maggiore dbr:Illyrian_stage dbr:Ticino dbc:Triassic_System_of_Europe dbr:Middle_Triassic dbr:Dolomite_(rock) dbr:Lake_Varese dbr:Gastropoda dbr:Monte_San_Salvatore dbr:Bivalvia dbr:Limestone_Alps dbr:Anoxic_waters dbr:Monte_San_Giorgio dbc:Limestone_Alps dbc:Geologic_formations_of_Switzerland dbr:Geological_formation dbc:Anisian_Stage dbr:Lake_Lugano dbr:Switzerland dbr:Po_plain dbr:Bellano_Formation dbr:San_Giorgio_Dolomite dbc:Fossiliferous_stratigraphic_units_of_Europe dbr:Micrite dbr:Pissone_Dolomite dbr:Pizzella_Marls dbr:Anisian dbr:Carbonate_platform
owl:sameAs
wikidata:Q108581963 n12:G5Fa5
dbp:subunits
Rasa Dolomite
dbp:underlies
dbr:Pizzella_Marls dbr:Besano_Formation
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbt:Reflist dbt:Infobox_Rockunit dbt:Flag dbt:Location_map~ dbt:Fossil_range dbt:Location_map+ dbt:Geologic-formation-stub
dbo:thumbnail
n13:Picswiss_TI-16-02.jpg?width=300
dbp:age
Late Anisian
dbp:caption
Monte San Salvatore, which is mostly formed by San Salvatore Dolomite
dbp:period
Anisian
dbp:region
dbr:Lombardy dbr:Ticino dbr:Piedmont
dbp:type
dbr:Geological_formation
dbo:abstract
The San Salvatore Dolomite, sometimes known as the Salvatore Dolomite or San Salvatore Formation, is a Middle Triassic (late Anisian) geological formation in Switzerland and Italy. The primarily lithology is micritic dolomite with a high proportion of algal mounds (stromatolites). It corresponds to a thick warm-water carbonate platform on the northern edge of an island in what is now the Po Plain. This formation and its local equivalents are common in the hills around Lake Maggiore, Varese, and Lugano, preserving fossils of marine invertebrates such as ammonoids, gastropods, and bivalves. At its southernmost extent on Monte San Giorgio, only the lower part of the San Salvatore Dolomite is preserved. The middle and upper parts are replaced by the Besano Formation, , and , which were deposited in a deeper and more anoxic basin between carbonate platforms.
dbp:extent
Southwestern Limestone Alps
dbp:namedfor
dbr:Monte_San_Salvatore
dbp:overlies
dbr:Bellano_Formation dbr:Pissone_Dolomite dbr:Fenera_Annunziata_Sandstone
dbp:prilithology
dbr:Dolomite_(rock)
prov:wasDerivedFrom
wikipedia-en:San_Salvatore_Dolomite?oldid=1060990417&ns=0
dbo:wikiPageLength
4796
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
wikipedia-en:San_Salvatore_Dolomite