The Jagüel Formation consists of monotonous olive green and yellowish mudrocks, traversed by thin veins of fibrous gypsum. These veins are found on the meteorized surface and they give distinct brightness to the outcrops. The claystones are plastic and friable, with waxy brightness. Some of them are laminated, while the siltstones are grayish. With these distinct characteristics, it crops out in its type locality and at Lomas Coloradas, where the unit is 18–26 m thick. The outcrops around Pellegrini Lake keep the typical characteristics of the unit. Olive green calcareous mudrocks appear in the northern sector of the lake, which are solid and friable with fragmentary remains of molluscs. In this sector, there is also abundant fossil content composed ofscallops and small brachiopods. Besides, there is an important microfaunal assemblage from the mid–Maastrichtian. In this area, it has a maximum thickness of 30 m. In the hills located in the north of General Roca, the outcrops of the Jagüel Formation are very friable, and they are covered by rock fragments from upper layers of the same unit. They are brown–olive. They make up the base of the hills and have the typical aspect of this unit. The boundary with the overlying Roca Formation is marked by yellowish resistant limestones. Finally, the lower part of the Jagüel Formation crops out above the southern margin of Casa de Piedra reservoir. It is composed of brown–ochre mudrocks, with many veins of gypsum at the base, and a thin layer of highly fossiliferous limestones that lies 1 m above its contact with the Allen Formation. The outcropping thickness of the unit is 25 m. Dark brown friable mudstones crop out above the northern shore of the reservoir, with remaining molluscs in the lower part, near the shore. In the upper section, there are ochre mudrocks which are gypseous, and its outcrops are partially covered; there, its thickness is 20 m. In this sector, the Jagüel Formation is covered unconformably by the Vaca Mahuida Formation. In the area of Huantraico, there are greenish calcareous mudstones, with thin intercalations of calcareous sandstones; the mudstones are solid or laminated. The lithofacies characteristics of the unit suggest an outer continental shelf environment, below the normal wave base.
Age and correlations
The micropaleontological content of the Jagüel Formation made it possible to classify it as Maastrichtian–Danian. This formation conformably overlies the Allen Formation and it also conformably underlies the Roca Formation. The Pircala–El Carrizo Formation lies above these formations. All of them belong to the Malargüe Group.
Fossil content
Microfossils
The Jagüel Formation, aged Maastrichtian and Danian, constitutes the peak of the transgression within the Malargüe Group, reaching maximum depths of a mid–outer shelf environment. It has abundant marine microfossils, such as planktonic and benthic foraminifera, calcareous ostracods and nannofossils, as well as dinoflagellates. Generally, they are well preserved. The micropaleontological record of the Jagüel Formation is of paramount importance since this unit contains the Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary in different localities, which marks the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event.
Reptiles
The record of faunal marine reptiles include mosasaurs and the marine turtleEuclastes meridionalis.
The Jagüel Formation contains marine deposits accumulated in inner positions of the basin, with depths that vary from a mid to an outer continental shelf. Sedimentological and paleontological evidence suggests a predominance of normal atmospheric conditions, below the normal wave base and with optimal circulation, away from the sources of detritus supply.