We derive quantitative star formation histories of the four suspected tidal
dwarf galaxies in the M81 group, HolmbergIX, BK3N, Arp-loop (A0952+69), and
Garland, using Hubble Space Telescope/Wide Field Planetary Camera2 images in
F606W and F814W obtained as part of a Snapshot survey of dwarf galaxies in the
Local Universe. We consider the spatial distribution and ages of resolved
stellar populations in these dwarf irregular galaxies. We use synthetic
color-magnitude diagrams to derive the ages of the major star formation
episodes, star formation rates, and approximate metallicity ranges. All the
galaxies show evidence of continuous star formation between about 20 and 200
Myr ago with star formation rates in the range 7.5*10^(-3)- 7.6*10^(-4)
M(sun)/yr. The metallicity of the detected stars spans a wide range, and have
lower than solar abundance. A possible scenario is that all four dwarf galaxies
were formed from material in the metal-poor outer part of the giant spiral
galaxy M81 after the tidal interaction between M81, M82, and NGC3077 about 200
Myr ago. While we do not directly detect pronounced old stellar populations,
the photometric limits of our data are such that the presence of such a
population is not entirely ruled out