The Lulworth Formation is a geologic formation in England. It dates from the late Tithonian to the mid Berriasian. It is a subunit of the Purbeck Group.[1] In Dorset, it consists of three members, which are in ascending order, the Mupe Member, the Ridgway Member, and the Warbarrow Tout Member. The Mupe Member is typically 11 to 16 m thick and largely consists of marls and micrites with interbeds of calcareous mudstone.[2] The Ridgeway Member is about 3 to 7 m thick and consists of in its western portion carbonaceous muds, marls and micrites, in the east the muds are replaced by micritic limestone.[3] The Warbarrow Tout Member is 17 to 39 m thick and consists of limestone at the base and micrite and mudstone for the rest of the sequence,[4] this member is the primary source of the vertebrate fossils within the formation.[5][6] Elsewhere the unit is undifferentiated.
^Evans, Susan E.; McGowan, Gerard J. (2002). "Lissamphibian remains from the Purbeck Limestone Group, southern England". Special Papers in Palaeontology: 104–119.
^Pérez-García, A. (May 2014). "Revision of the poorly known Dorsetochelys typocardium, a relatively abundant pleurosternid turtle (Paracryptodira) in the Early Cretaceous of Europe". Cretaceous Research. 49: 152–162. Bibcode:2014CrRes..49..152P. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2014.02.015. ISSN0195-6671.