Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Petrography and depostional environments of the Lower Ordovician El Paso Formation
View through CrossRef
The Lower Ordovician (Canadian) El Paso Formation conformably overlies Bliss Sandstone across most of southern New Mexico and west Texas. Locally, lower El Paso beds overlie plutonic and volcanic rocks. Field examination, sampling, and petrographic study of 38 stratigraphic sections from southeastern Arizona, across southern New Mexico, to Van Horn, Texas, indicate the El Paso was deposited in shallow waters near a shoreline to the north. The southwestern edge of the North American craton had subsided gradually throughout most of Canadian time, receiving the up-to 420-m-thick El Paso carbonate blanket.The El Paso Formation is subdivided by lithology into four members that are recognized throughout the region. In ascending order, the members are the Hitt Canyon (33-136 m), the Jose (3-33 m), the McKelligon (45-190 m), and the Padre (35-117 m). The gradually decreasing sand content upward through the Hitt Canyon Member indicates the Hitt Canyon was deposited farther from shore in waters that became deeper as the seas transgressed northward. Girvanella oncolites are locally abundant. Stromatolite mounds near the top of the Hitt Canyon and the presence of sand, ooids, and rounded bioclasts in the Jose Member record a shoaling environment. The McKelligon Member contains little or no sand; at several locales sponge-Calathium mounds and stromatolite mounds are prominent. The Padre contains a more restricted fauna that includes traces of ostracods. Beds in the lower part of the Padre Member are silty to sandy and locally contain thinly laminated zones.There is no correlation between stratigraphic members of the El Paso Formation and occurrences of dolostone. Beds in the lower part of the Hitt Canyon Member are typically dolostone, but are limestone at 25% of the sections studied. The El Paso Formation is mostly to completely dolostone at Beach Mountain near Van Horn, Texas, at Bishop Cap, and in the Sacramento, San Andres, Oscura, and Pedregosa Mountains. The El Paso is predominantly limestone at San Diego Mountain and in the Caballo and Mud Springs Mountains, 60 km west of the Bishop Cap-San Andres-Oscura Mountains trend. At other locales, the limestone/dolostone ratios vary with no apparent geographic relationship. Locally, single beds of dolostone are interbedded with limestone sections. More typically, dolostone or limestone prevails for tens of meters of section. Evidence of supratidal dolostone is lacking except in some beds in the Jose and Padre Members. Hydrothermal dolostone is common in several sections.Pervasive bioturbation of El Paso Formation beds and a varied biota of echinoderms, sponges, gastropods, trilobites, Nuia, Calathium, cephalopods, and algae (plus minor brachiopods, Pulchrilamina, and ostracods) indicate a predominantly shallow-subtidal environment. Intertidal conditions prevailed intermittently, and possibly supratidal deposition took place during parts of Jose and early Padre times. Low-energy platform environments, in which a large volume of micritic muds accumulated, were often disturbed by storms that produced abundant thin, poorly washed biosparite, intrasparite, and intrasparrudite (bioclastic and intraclastic grainstone) lenses.
Title: Petrography and depostional environments of the Lower Ordovician El Paso Formation
Description:
The Lower Ordovician (Canadian) El Paso Formation conformably overlies Bliss Sandstone across most of southern New Mexico and west Texas.
Locally, lower El Paso beds overlie plutonic and volcanic rocks.
Field examination, sampling, and petrographic study of 38 stratigraphic sections from southeastern Arizona, across southern New Mexico, to Van Horn, Texas, indicate the El Paso was deposited in shallow waters near a shoreline to the north.
The southwestern edge of the North American craton had subsided gradually throughout most of Canadian time, receiving the up-to 420-m-thick El Paso carbonate blanket.
The El Paso Formation is subdivided by lithology into four members that are recognized throughout the region.
In ascending order, the members are the Hitt Canyon (33-136 m), the Jose (3-33 m), the McKelligon (45-190 m), and the Padre (35-117 m).
The gradually decreasing sand content upward through the Hitt Canyon Member indicates the Hitt Canyon was deposited farther from shore in waters that became deeper as the seas transgressed northward.
Girvanella oncolites are locally abundant.
Stromatolite mounds near the top of the Hitt Canyon and the presence of sand, ooids, and rounded bioclasts in the Jose Member record a shoaling environment.
The McKelligon Member contains little or no sand; at several locales sponge-Calathium mounds and stromatolite mounds are prominent.
The Padre contains a more restricted fauna that includes traces of ostracods.
Beds in the lower part of the Padre Member are silty to sandy and locally contain thinly laminated zones.
There is no correlation between stratigraphic members of the El Paso Formation and occurrences of dolostone.
Beds in the lower part of the Hitt Canyon Member are typically dolostone, but are limestone at 25% of the sections studied.
The El Paso Formation is mostly to completely dolostone at Beach Mountain near Van Horn, Texas, at Bishop Cap, and in the Sacramento, San Andres, Oscura, and Pedregosa Mountains.
The El Paso is predominantly limestone at San Diego Mountain and in the Caballo and Mud Springs Mountains, 60 km west of the Bishop Cap-San Andres-Oscura Mountains trend.
At other locales, the limestone/dolostone ratios vary with no apparent geographic relationship.
Locally, single beds of dolostone are interbedded with limestone sections.
More typically, dolostone or limestone prevails for tens of meters of section.
Evidence of supratidal dolostone is lacking except in some beds in the Jose and Padre Members.
Hydrothermal dolostone is common in several sections.
Pervasive bioturbation of El Paso Formation beds and a varied biota of echinoderms, sponges, gastropods, trilobites, Nuia, Calathium, cephalopods, and algae (plus minor brachiopods, Pulchrilamina, and ostracods) indicate a predominantly shallow-subtidal environment.
Intertidal conditions prevailed intermittently, and possibly supratidal deposition took place during parts of Jose and early Padre times.
Low-energy platform environments, in which a large volume of micritic muds accumulated, were often disturbed by storms that produced abundant thin, poorly washed biosparite, intrasparite, and intrasparrudite (bioclastic and intraclastic grainstone) lenses.
Related Results
Ordovician zircons as detrital markers in the Ötztal Nappe (Austroalpine, Italy)
Ordovician zircons as detrital markers in the Ötztal Nappe (Austroalpine, Italy)
<p>The Austroalpine &#214;tztal Nappe shows pervasive Eoalpine and local Variscan high-pressure metamorphism and deformation in its southeastern end, which ob...
Global palaeogeographical implication of acritarchs in the Upper Ordovician
Global palaeogeographical implication of acritarchs in the Upper Ordovician
The EarlyâMiddle Ordovician peri-Gondwana and Baltica acritarch provinces are easily recognizable, illustrating a clear provincialism of global phytoplankton. However, acritarch ...
Reservoir forming conditions and exploration potential of Lower Paleozoic carbonate rocks in Gucheng area, Tarim Basin
Reservoir forming conditions and exploration potential of Lower Paleozoic carbonate rocks in Gucheng area, Tarim Basin
The Gucheng region is oil and gas accumulation area of Tarim Basin,dominated by beach controlled lithologic oil and gas reservoirs,which has superior oil and gas accumulation condi...
Ordovician Bryozoa of Estonia
Ordovician Bryozoa of Estonia
sessile colonial, filter-feeding animals, many of which possess hard carbonate skeletons of different morphology. The bryozoan faunas of the Ordovician of Estonia were studied earl...
Ordovician Intrusive‐related Gold‐Copper Mineralization in West‐Central New South Wales, Australia
Ordovician Intrusive‐related Gold‐Copper Mineralization in West‐Central New South Wales, Australia
AbstractThree major types of Ordovician intrusive‐related gold‐copper deposits are recognized in central‐west New South Wales, Australia: porphyry, skarn and high sulphidation epit...
Reefs in the Early Paleozoic Taebaek Group, Korea: A Review
Reefs in the Early Paleozoic Taebaek Group, Korea: A Review
AbstractVarious early Paleozoic (Cambrian Series 3–Middle Ordovician) reefs are found in the Taebaek Group, eastern Korea, located in the eastern margin of the Sino‐Korean Block. T...
Multi-layer Hydrocarbon Accumulation Model in Yuqi area, Tarim Basin, China
Multi-layer Hydrocarbon Accumulation Model in Yuqi area, Tarim Basin, China
The superimposed basins in western China have undergone multiple periods of tectonic changes and cycles of oil and gas accumulation, and the distribution patterns of oil and gas ar...

