Bromide Formation

{{Short description|Geological formation in Oklahoma, U.S.}}

{{Lead too short|date=April 2021}}

{{Infobox rockunit

| image = Homotelus bromidensis fossil trilobites (Bromide Formation, Middle Ordovician; Criner Hills, southeastern Carter County, southern Oklahoma, USA) 4 (15402497771).jpg

| period = Upper Ordovician

| age = early Sandbian 461–458{{fossil range|461|458| Myo|earliest=|latest=|ref=|prefix=|PS=}}| caption =

| type = Geological formation

| prilithology = limestone

| otherlithology = limestone interbedded with shale, and sandstone

| namedfor =

| namedby = Ulrich, 1911

| region = Central-South Oklahoma: Carter County, Johnston County, Murray County and Pontotoc County|country = United States of America

| coordinates = {{Coord|34|00|N|97|00|W|region:US-OK_type:landmark_source:dewiki}}

| unitof = Simpson Group

| subunits = Mountain Lake Member, Pooleville Member

| overlies = Tulip Creek FormationJones, R.H. The Middle-Upper Ordovician Simpson Group of the Permian Basin: Deposition, Diagenesis, and Reservoir Development [http://www.beg.utexas.edu/resprog/permianbasin/PBGSP_members/writ_synth/Simpson.pdf]

| underlies = Viola FormationCarlucci J.R. and S.R. Westrop. Sequence Stratigraphy and Facies Architecture of the Bromide Formation (Upper Ordovician; Sandbian) of Oklahoma. 2009 Portland Geological Society of America Annual Meeting. Paper No. 36-5.

| thickness = {{convert|71|m|ft|sp=us}} Pooleville Member at type location.Fay, O. and A.A. Graffham. Biostratigraphic and paleontological studies. Echinoderm faunas from the Bromide Formation (Middle Ordovician) of Oklahoma: Lawrence, Kansas, University of Kansas Paleontological Institute Monograph 11 30-33 (1982)

| extent = from Blount to DecorahLoeblich, A.R. jr. Bryozoa from the Ordovician Bromide Formation Oklahoma. Journal of Paleontology, 16-4 (1942)[https://www.jstor.org/pss/1298838]

| area =

| map =

| map_caption =

}}

The Bromide Formation is a geological formation in Oklahoma, USA. It is well known for its diverse echinoderm and trilobite fossil fauna.

Location

The Bromide Formation crops out in the Arbuckle and Wichita Mountains and in the Criner Hills of Southern Oklahoma. It appears at the surface in particular within Carter, Johnston, Murray and Pontotoc counties (34.0° N, 97.0° W).Amsden, T.W. Upper Bromide Formation and Viola Group (Middle and Upper Ordovician in Eastern Oklahoma). Part I – Welling-Fite-Corbin-Ranch-Strata. Oklahoma Geological Survey. Bulletin 132 (1983)[http://www.ogs.ou.edu/pubsscanned/BULLETINS/Bulletin132.pdf]

Stratigraphy

The Bromide Formation is the uppermost part of the Simpson Group, and originates from the Upper Ordovician (early Sandbian). This mostly carbonate succession is divided into the Mountain Lake and overlying Pooleville members. Although it primarily consists of limestone, limestone interbedded with shale, and sandstone, also occur.Viola Limestone and Bromide Formation. Mineral Resources On-Line Spatial Data. U.S. Geological Survey [https://mrdata.usgs.gov/geology/state/sgmc-unit.php?unit=OKOvb%3B0] The Bromide Formation is a shallow water marine sediment.Bauer, J.A. Conodonts from the Bromide Formation (Middle Ordovician), South-Central Oklahoma. Journal of Paleontology 68-2 (1994).

Much of the Mountain Lake Member comprises meter-scale, deep ramp cycles that overlie a lowstand systems tract of sandstones and sandy crinoidal grainstones. Cycle tops are starved surfaces with irregular, mineralized hardgrounds. The Pooleville Member consists of an early highstand interval of shallow subtidal carbonates and late highstand peritidal carbonates (Corbin Ranch Submember). Down-ramp, the Pooleville is represented largely by centimeter-thick shales and interbedded lime mudstones.

Economic use

The Bromide Formation has been a source of oil and gas, with exploration slightly north of the area where the formation is exposed.

Image:Bromide Formation panorama.jpg

Origin

The Bromide Formation was deposited in a shallow, storm-dominated epeiric sea that extended over part of the Laurentia continent, in what is today Southern Oklahoma. The sea spread into an area that sunk into a rift, that ultimately did not endure, a so-called aulacogen. Lying approximately at 30° Southern latitude, a low-land desert bordered much of the shallow sea from where well-rounded quartz sand blew in. This now represents the sandstone at the base of the Bromide Formation. Eventually, sea level rise caused by subsidence drowned the borderlands cutting off the supply of sand, and now the shales and limestones of the Middle Bromide (upper Mountain Lake Member) accumulated on a broad ramp. Gradually – primarily echinoderm – skeletons build up a carbonate shelf. Further eustatic sea level rise (transgression) cut off the supply of virtually all sediments from land, and remains of carbonate-producing organisms began filling the basin. This now forms the limestone of the upper Bromide (Pooleville Member). Finally, a drop in sea level (regression) exposed the entire platform, and became a broad, nearly featureless, hot, semi-arid sabkha.Longman, M.W. Deposition of the Bromide Formation, Arbuckle Mountains, Oklahoma: Ontogeny of an Ancient Carbonate Shelf. Oklahoma City Geological Society Volume, pp. 268-285 (1982).[http://payperview.datapages.com/data/open/offer.do?target=%2Focgs%2Fdata%2F010%2F010001%2F0268.htm]

Fossils

Fossils have been found in the Bromide Formation of green algae, sponges, corals, graptolites, lampshells, moss animals, trilobites, clam shrimps, molluscs, several groups of echinoderms, and teeth of jawless fish.

= [[Chlorophyta|Green algae]] =

  • Ischadites iowensisAmsden, T.W. Catalogue of Fossils from the Middle and Upper Ordovician of Oklahoma. Oklahoma Geological Survey, Circular 43. 1957Byrnes, J.G. Notes on the Nature and Environmental Significance of the Receptaculitaceae. Lethaia, Vol. 1, pp. 368-381 (1968)File:Ischadites iowensis.jpg

= [[Porifera|Sponges]] =

  • Dierespongia pallaRigby, J.K. and R.C. Gutschick. Two new Lower Paleozoic Hexactinellid Sponges from Utah and Oklahoma. Journal of Paleontology, 50-1, pp. 79-85 (1976)

= [[Anthozoa|Corals]] =

  • Saffordophyllum deckeri
  • Tetradium oklahomense
  • Tetradium spicululatum

= [[Graptolithina|Graptolites]] =

  • Dicellograptus gurlei
  • Dictyonema francesiae
  • Dictyonema rockcrossingensis
  • Diplograptus (Amplexograptus) maxwelli

= [[Brachiopoda|Lampshells]] =

Image:Chaulistomella magna brachial valve.jpg

File:Hesperorthis sulcata brachial.jpgImage:Oxoplecia gouldi lateral.jpg

File:Schizambon perspinosum.jpg

Image:Spirifer perlamellosus 2 brachial valve.jpg

Image:Strophomena costellata brachial.jpg

  • Acanthocrania erecta (mountain lake member?)
  • Acanthocrania oklahomensis (pooleville member)
  • Acanthocrania subquadrata (mountain lake member)
  • Ancistorhyncha costata (corbin branche member)Fossil collection of Geological Enterprises, Ardmore, OK, USA
  • Ancistorhyncha globularis (pooleville member)
  • Athelelasma oklahomense (mountain lake member)
  • Bellimurina compressa (mountain lake member)
  • Bellimurina subquadrata (mountain lake member)
  • Camerella anteroplicata (pooleville member)
  • Camerella oklahomensis (pooleville member)
  • Chaulistomella crassa (mountain lake member)
  • Chaulistomella magna [=Dinorthis subquadrata] [=Valcourea magna] (pooleville member)
  • Chaulistomella mira (mountain lake member)
  • Chaulistomella mundula (mountain lake member)
  • Chaulistomella nitens (mountain lake member)
  • Chaulistomella obesa (mountain lake member)
  • Cliftonia occidentalis
  • Craniops tenuis (pooleville member)
  • Cyclospira parva (pooleville member)
  • Dactylogonia sculpturata parva (mountain lake member)
  • Dactylogonia subaequicostellata (mountain lake member)
  • Doleroides compressus (mountain lake member)
  • Doleroides oklahomensis (pooleville member)
  • Ectenoglossa cf. sculpta (pooleville member)
  • Fascifera dalmanelloidea (mountain lake member)
  • Glossella liumbona (pooleville member)
  • Glyptorthis costellata (pooleville member)
  • Glyptorthis crenulata (pooleville member)
  • Glyptorthis obesa (mountain lake member)
  • Glyptorthis uncinata (mountain lake member)
  • Hesperorthis crinerensis (mountain lake member)
  • Hesperorthis sulcata (pooleville member)
  • Lingulella galba (mountain lake member)
  • Lingulella cf. glypta (pooleville member)
  • Lingulasma oklahomense (pooleville member)
  • Macrocoelia bella (mountain lake member)
  • Mimella extensa (mountain lake member)
  • Mimella subquadrata (mountain lake member)
  • Multicostella sulcata (mountain lake member)
  • Murinella partita (mountain lake member)
  • Onychoplecia tenuis (mountain lake member)
  • Oepikina sp.
  • Oepikina expatiata (mountain lake member)
  • Oepikina extensa (pooleville member)
  • Oepikina formosa (pooleville member)
  • Oepikina gregaria (mountain lake member)
  • Orbiculoidea eximia (pooleville member)
  • Orthis tricrenata
  • Oxoplecia filosa (mountain lake member)
  • Oxoplecia gouldi (pooleville member)
  • Oxoplecia occidentalis
  • Pachyclossa biconvexa (pooleville member)
  • Paurorthis macrodeltoidea (pooleville member)
  • Petrocrania sp. (mountain lake member)
  • Petrocrania inflata (pooleville member)
  • cf. Philhedra sp. (mountain lake member)
  • Platymena cf. bellatula (pooleville member)
  • Plectorthis symmetrica
  • Protozyga costata (pooleville member)
  • Protozyga elongata (mountain lake member)
  • Protozyga loeblichi (pooleville member)
  • Protozyga magnicostata (mountain lake member)
  • Pseudolingula imperfecta
  • Oepikina minnesotensis [=Rafinesquina minnesotensis]
  • Rostricellula sp. (pooleville member)
  • Rostricellula cuneata (mountain lake member)
  • Rostricellula parva (pooleville member)
  • Rostricellula transversa (pooleville member)
  • Schizambon perspinosum (mountain lake member)
  • Skenidoides oklahomensis (mountain lake member)
  • Skenidoides perfectus (pooleville member)
  • Sowerbyella sp. (mountain lake member)
  • Sowerbyella indistincta (mountain lake member)
  • Sowerbyella plicatifera (mountain lake member)
  • Sowerbyella variabilis (pooleville member)
  • Sowerbyella vulgata (mountain lake member)
  • Sowerbyites hami (pooleville member)
  • Sowerbyites lamellosus (mountain lake member)
  • Spirifer perlamellosus
  • Strophomena costellata (pooleville member)
  • Strophomena crinerensis (pooleville member)
  • Strophomena oklahomensis (pooleville member)
  • Valcourea transversa (mountain lake member)

= [[Bryozoa|Moss animals]] =

  • Anolotichia deckeri
  • Anolotichia impolita
  • Anolotichia spinulifera
  • Atactoporella bellula
  • Batostoma chapparsi
  • Batostoma cumingsi
  • Batostoma winchelli
  • Dekayella praenuntia echinata
  • Eridotrypa abrupta
  • Fistulipora cf. bassleri
  • Hallopora dubia
  • Hallopora macrostoma
  • Hallopora pachymura
  • Hemiphragma irrasum
  • Hemiphragma pulchrum
  • Heterotrypa taffi
  • Homotrypa callitoecha
  • Homotrypa multitabulata
  • Homotrypa sagittataFile:Pachydictya bromidensis.jpg
  • Homotrypa ulrichi
  • Mesotrypa favosa
  • Mesotrypa tubulifera
  • Monticuliporella croneisi
  • Monticuliporella peculiaris
  • Monticuliporella shideleri
  • Nicholsonella irregularis
  • Nicholsonella laminata
  • Nicholsonella moniliformis
  • Pachydictya bromidensis
  • Prasopora fritzae
  • Stromatotrypa frondosaImage:Dolichoharpes reticulata cephalon dorsal.jpg

= [[Arthropoda|Arthropods]] =

== [[Trilobita|Trilobites]] ==

  • Amphilichas subpunctatusShaw, F.C. Simpson Group (Middle Ordovician) Trilobites of Oklahoma. Journal of Paleontology 48-5, Memoir 6, Part II (1974) [http://www.westerntrilobites.com/Formations/Oklahoma.htm]
  • Apianurus sp.
  • Bumastoides milleri
  • Bumastus sp.Image:Frencrinuroides capitonis roled dorsal.jpg
  • Calliops armatus
  • Calliops divaricatus
  • Calyptaulax annulata (Mountain Lake Member)
  • Ceratocephala graffhami
  • Ceraurus ruidus [=Eoceraurus trapezoidalis]
  • Cybeloides sp.
  • Dolichoharpes reticulata [=procliva]
  • Estoniops? divaricatus
  • Failleana sp.
  • Frencrinuroides capitonis [=Encrinuroides capitonis]
  • Harpillaenus sp.
  • Illaenus americanus
  • Isoteloides sp.
  • Isotelus gigas
  • Lonchodomas mcgeheei
  • Nanillaenus punctatusImage:Nanillaenus punctatus pygidium.jpg
  • Otarion sp.
  • Pandaspinapyga salsa
  • Pliomerops canadensis (Mountain Lake Member)
  • Probolichas sp.
  • Remopleurides sp.
  • Sphaerocoryphe sp.
  • Thaleops jaanussoni (Mountain Lake Member)
  • Vogdesia bromidensis Shaw 1974 (Esker 1964) [=Homotelus bromidensis] (Mountain Lake Member)Image:Homotelus bromidensis dorsal.jpg trilobite known as Homotelus bromidensis]]

== [[Ostracoda|Clam shrimps]] ==

  • Bromidella reticulata
  • Bythocypris cylindrica
  • Cryptophyllus oboloides
  • Dicranella bicornis
  • Eridoconcha magna
  • Eridoconcha simpsoni
  • Eurychilina reticulata
  • Eurychilina ventrosa
  • Halliella labiosa
  • Krausella arcuata
  • Leperditella cf. deckeri
  • Leperditella inflata
  • Primitiopsis bassleri
  • Schmidtella umbonata
  • Ulrichia initialis

= [[Mollusca|Molluscs]] =

  • Helicotoma umbilicata
  • Liospira vitruvia
  • Aristerella nitidula

= [[Echinodermata|Echinoderms]] =

== [[Sea urchin|Sea urchins and sand dollars]] ==

  • Bromidechinus rimaporus (Pooleville Member)Smith, A.B. and J.J. Savill. Bromidechinus, a new Ordovician echinozoan (Echinodermata), and its bearing on the early history of echinoids. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh: Earth Sciences 92, pp. 137-147 (2001)

== [[Edrioasteroidea|Edrioasteroids]] ==

  • Cyathocystus oklahomae{{cite journal|last1=Fay|first1=R.O.|last2=Graffham|first2=A.A.|last3=Sprinkle|first3=J.|year=1982|title=Previous studies of Bromide echinoderms. Echinoderm faunas from the Bromide Formation (Middle Ordovician) of Oklahoma| journal=University of Kansas Paleontological Institute Monograph|volume=11|pages=34–44|url= https://paleobiodb.org/classic/displayCollResults?collection_no=23990}}

== [[Cystoidea|Cystoids]] ==

Image:Anthracocrinus primitivus.jpg

  • Amygdalocystites tribranchiatus
  • Anthracocrinus primitivus
  • Cheirocrinus ardmorensis
  • Cheirocrinus cf. loeblichi
  • Echinoencrinites cf. ornatus
  • Enoploura cf. papillata
  • Eumorphocystus multiporata
  • Glyptocytites loeblichae
  • Glyptocytites logani
  • Hesperocystus deckeri
  • Myeinocytites natusImage:Oklahomacystis tribrachiatus normalized.jpg
  • Oklahomacystus tribranchiatus
  • Pararchaeocrinus decoratus
  • Platycystites bassleri
  • Platycystites bromidensis
  • Platycystites cristatus
  • Platycystites fimbratus
  • Platycystites levatus
  • Pleurocystites watkinsi
  • Quadrocystis graffhami
  • Synclairocytis angulatus
  • Synclairocytis sulphurensis
  • Tanaocystis watkinsiKlimetz, M.P. The Regents Earth Science and Regents Physics Web Resource for Students and Teachers [http://earthphysicsteaching.homestead.com/Cystoids.html]
  • Traskocrinus sp.

== [[Crinoidea|Sea lilies]] ==

  • Annulocrinus ramiferBrower, J.C. Calceocrinoids from the Bromide Formation (Middle Ordovician) of Southern Oklahoma. Oklahoma Geological Survey, Circular 78 (1977)[http://www.ogs.ou.edu/pubsscanned/Circulars/circular78.pdf]
  • Archaeocrinus subovalis
  • Calceocrinus longifrons
  • Carabocrinus treadwelli
  • Euptychocrinus skopaios
  • Hybocrinus crinerensis
  • Hybocrinus nitidus
  • Hybocrinus pyxidatus
  • Palaeocrinus hudsoni
  • Paracremacrinus laticardinalis

= [[Chordata|Chordates]] =

== [[Conodont|Teeth of jawless fish (conodonts)]] ==

References