Fusselman Formation
Stratigraphic range:
Fusselman Formation at Quartzite Ridge, Lake Valley, New Mexico, USA
TypeFormation
Sub-unitsChamberino Member, Flag Hill Member, Crazycat Member
UnderliesPercha Formation
OverliesMontoya Group
Thickness1,400 meters (4,600 ft)
Lithology
PrimaryDolomite
Location
Coordinates31°53′14″N 106°28′40″W / 31.8873°N 106.4779°W / 31.8873; -106.4779
RegionTexas
CountryUnited States
Type section
Named byG.B. Richardson
Year defined1908
Fusselman Formation is located in the United States
Fusselman Formation
Fusselman Formation (the United States)
Fusselman Formation is located in Texas
Fusselman Formation
Fusselman Formation (Texas)

The Fusselman Formation is a geologic formation in westernmost Texas and southern New Mexico. It preserves fossils dating back to the early Silurian period.[1][2]

Description

Karst surface in Fusselman Formation, Quartzite Ridge, Lake Valley, New Mexico, USA

The formation consists mostly of medium to dark gray massive dolomite. It has a light and dark banded appearance due to alternating beds of light gray peritidal laminated carbonate mudstone and dark gray cherty wackestone or packstone containing abundant corals. The total thickness is over 1,400 meters (4,600 ft) in the Florida Mountains but the formation varies greatly in thickness. The formations unconformably overlies the Montoya Group[3] and is overlain by the Onate Formation.[4] The upper contact shows that the area was tilted and eroded prior to the Devonian.[3]

The formation is divided into the Chamberino, Flag Hill, and Crazycat members in the Sacramento Mountains.[5]

Extensive dolomitization of the formation has obscured its primary depositional fabric and made interpretation of its depositional environment difficult.[3]

Fossils

The formation is relatively poor in fossils compared with the underlying El Paso Formation. However, it contains fossils of pentamerid brachiopods, corals, and stromatoporoids. These include the corals Cyanthophyllum, Favosites, Halysites, and Heliolites and the gastropod Hormatoma.[3]

Economic geology

The uppermost part of the formation shows significant barite-fluorite and base metal mineralization, where migrating fluids are trapped by the overlying impermeable shale formations.[3]

History of investigation

The name was first used by G.B. Richardson in 1908 for outcrops in Fusselman Canyon in the Franklin Mountains.[1] It was divided into members in the Florida Mountains by Kottlowski and Pray in 1967.[5]

See also

Footnotes

References

  • Kottlowski, Frank E.; Pray, Lloyd C. (1967). "Silurian Outcrops of Southcentral and Southwestern New Mexico". Tulsa Geological Society Digest. 35: 209–230. Retrieved September 15, 2020.
  • Poole, F.G.; Stewart, J.H.; Palmer, A.R.; Sandberg, C.A.; Madrid, R.J.; Ross, R.J. Jr.; Hintze, L.F.; Miller, M.M.; Wrucke, C.T. (1992). "Latest Precambrian to latest Devonian time; development of a continental margin". In Burchfiel, B.C.; Lipman, P.W.; Zoback, M.L. (eds.). The Decade of North American Geology (DNAG). Vol. G-3. Geological Society of America, The Geology of North America. pp. 9–56.
  • Pope, Michael C. (2004). "Upper Ordovician and lower to middle Silurian miogeoclinal rocks". In Mack, G.H.; Giles, K.A. (eds.). The geology of New Mexico. A geologic history: New Mexico Geological Society Special Volume 11. pp. 45–58. ISBN 9781585460106.
  • Richardson, G.B. (1908). "Paleozoic formations in Trans-Pecos Texas". American Journal of Science. 4th Series. 25 (49): 474–484. doi:10.2475/ajs.s4-25.150.474.
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