Capitan Formation
{{Short description|Geologic formation in Texas and New Mexico}}
{{Infobox rockunit
| name = Capitan Formation
| image = El Capitan 2005.jpg
| caption = The Capitan Formation underlies El Capitan in Guadalupe Mountains National Park.
| type = Formation
| age = {{Geological range|Guadalupian}}
| period = Guadalupian
| prilithology = Limestone
| otherlithology = dolomite
| namedfor = El Capitan Peak
| namedby = G.B. Richardson
| year_ts = 1904
| region = Texas
New Mexico
| country = United States
| coordinates = {{coord|31.8773|N|104.8668|W|display:inline}}
| unitof =
| subunits =
| underlies = Artesia Group, Castile Formation
| overlies = Goat Seep Dolomite, Delaware Mountain Group
| thickness = {{convert|1800|ft|m|abbr=on}}
| extent =
| area =
| map = {{Location map+ | United States#Texas
| relief = 1
| width = 250
| float = center
| places =
{{Location map~ | United States#Texas
| lat_deg = 31.8773
| lon_deg = -104.8668
| mark = Red pog.svg
| marksize = 12
}}
}}
| map_caption =
}}
File:Capitan Reef Guadalupe Mountains National Park sign.jpg]]
The Capitan Formation is a geologic formation found in western Texas and southeastern New Mexico. It is a fossilized reef dating to the Guadalupian Age of the Permian period.
The formation underlies El Capitan in Guadalupe Mountains National Park,"Geologic Formations." Gualadupe Mountains National Park and the formation and its associated basin, shelf margin, and backreef formations have been described as "the largest, best-preserved, most accessible, and most intensively studied Paleozoic reef complex in the world."Kues and Giles 2004, p.125
History of investigation
The Guadalupe Mountains were first described in the reports of 1849 and 1850 United States military expeditions to the area. George Shumard was the first geologist to study the area, in 1855, and described an "upper white limestone" containing fossils. These included fusulinids and brachiopods, that were identified correctly by his brother, B.F. Shumard, as Permian in age. However, debate on whether the beds were Carboniferous or Permian in age continued until at least 1920.Kues 2006 The work of Darton and Reeside in 1926Darton and Reeside 1926 established the accepted framework for the stratigraphy of the area, and identified the Capitan Formation as late Permian in age.
The Capitan Formation itself was first named by G.B. Richardson in 1904 for exposures in the Guadalupe Mountains. Richardson was impressed by the great mass of seemingly uniform limestone, forming vertical cliffs over {{convert|1000|feet|meters}} tall, and noted that much of the limestone was dolomitized. He was also impressed with the abundant fossils found in the middle beds of the formation, forming a fossil assemblage unlike anything else known at that time. Richardson interpreted the Guadalupe Mountains as an east-dipping monocline with a fault on the steep western boundary, and believed El Capitan itself was a product of erosion.Richardson 1904Richardson 1908
Interest in the formation was rekindled by the discovery in May 1923 of the Big Lake oil field in Texas and the drilling of the first commercial oil well in southeastern New Mexico in 1924. This culminated in the publication by E. Russell Lloyd in 1929 of his interpretation of the Capitan Limestone and associated formations as a gigantic fossil coral reef. Lloyd traced the reef nearly to Carlsbad and noted that the dissimilarity of the formations on the two sides of the reef, now known as the basin and backreef shelf facies.Lloyd 1929 Two months later, a “Symposium on Pennsylvanian and Permian stratigraphy of southwestern United States” appeared in the August, 1929 issue of the Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists,Lahee 1929 which provided a flood of new details on the Capitan reef.
As part of that symposium, Philip B. King and R.E. King presented their conclusion that the Tessey, Gilliam, and Vidrio Limestones of the Glass Mountains of west Texas were correlative with the Capitan Formation, and redesigned them as members of the formation.King and King 1929King 1930 However, by 1937, King had concluded that the Tessey Limestone was not part of the Capital Formation and removed it as a member.King 1937 By 1942 he had restricted the definition of the Capitan Formation to reef limestone, consistent with the stratigraphic conventions in the Guadalupe Mountains, and removed the Gilliam and most of the Vidrio Limestone from the formation.King 1942
Description
The Capitan Formation consists of compact, massive, light grey to white limestone with minor dolomite. Its total thickness is {{convert|1000-2000|feet|meters|sp=us}}.King 1948 On the backreef side of the formation, the Capitan rests on the Goat Seep Dolomite and grades into and is overlain by the Artesia Group, while on the basin side, the Capitan rests on the Delaware Mountain Group and is overlain by the Castile Formation.Kues 2006, p.128Kues and Giles 2004, p.100 The formation thus forms a narrow belt curving around the western side of the Delaware Basin that interfingers with backreef formations on the northwestern to southwestern side and with basin formations on the southeastern to northeastern side.
The formation is a giant fossil reef, extending at least from the Carlsbad area to the Glass Mountains of Texas. At its greatest development, the reef may have been built up to {{convert|200-300|feet|meters|sp=us}} above the sea floor.
Fossils
=[[Fusulinida]]=
- Fusulina elongata
=[[Porifera]]=
- Numerous species
=[[Anthozoa]]=
- A few species
=[[Bryozoa]]=
=[[Brachiopoda]]=
- Streptorhynchus
- Orthotetes
- Geyerella
- Orthothetina
- Chonetes
- Productus occidentalis
- P. subhotridus
- P. popei
- P. mexicanus
- Marginifera pileolus
- Spirifer mexicanus
- Spirifer sev sp.
- Martinia
- Squamularia guadalupensis
- Ambocoelia
- Spiriferina billingsi
- Hustedia meekana
- Pugnax swallowiana
- Rhynchonella indentata
- Terebratuloids
- Leptodus
- Richthofenia permiana
=[[Mollusca]]=
- Schizodus securas
- Aviculopecten
- Lima
- Camptonectes
- Streblopteria
- Myalina squamosa
- Myoconcha
- Indeterminate gastropods
King found that the Vidrio Limestone Member had been highly dolomitized, destroying most of its fossil contents, but he recognized fossils of coralline algae, cup corals, crinoid stems, fusulinids, echinoid spines, and brachiopods.
See also
{{Portal |Earth sciences|Texas|Paleontology}}
Footnotes
{{Reflist}}
References
- {{cite journal |last1=Darton |first1=N. H. |last2=Reeside |first2=J. B. |title=Guadalupe Group |journal=Geological Society of America Bulletin |date=30 September 1926 |volume=37 |issue=3 |pages=413–428 |doi=10.1130/GSAB-37-413|bibcode=1926GSAB...37..413D }}
- {{cite journal |last1=King |first1=P.B. |year=1930 |title=The geology of the Glass Mountains, Texas; Part 1, Descriptive geology |journal=University of Texas Bulletin |volume=3038}}
- {{cite journal |last1=King |first1=P.B. |title=Geology of the southern Guadalupe Mountains, Texas |journal=U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper |date=1937 |volume=187 |doi=10.3133/pp187|url=https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc957816/ |doi-access=free }}
- {{cite journal |last1=King |first1=Philip B. |title=Geology of the Southern Guadalupe Mountains, Texas |journal=U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper |series=Professional Paper |date=1948 |volume=215 |doi=10.3133/pp215|url=https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc1036553/ }}
- {{cite journal |last1=King |first1=P.B. |title=Permian of West Texas and Southeastern New Mexico: PART 1 |journal=AAPG Bulletin |date=1942 |volume=26 |doi=10.1306/3D933466-16B1-11D7-8645000102C1865D}}
- {{cite journal |last1=King |first1=Philip B. |last2=King |first2=Robert E. |title=Stratigraphy of Outcropping Carboniferous and Permian Rocks of Trans-Pecos Texas |journal=AAPG Bulletin |date=1929 |volume=13 |doi=10.1306/3D93286B-16B1-11D7-8645000102C1865D}}
- {{cite journal |last1=Kues |first1=Barry S. |year=2006 |pages=127–144 |title=Geological studies of the Guadalupe Mountains area, New Mexico and West Texas, to 1928 |journal=New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Series |volume=57 |url=https://nmgs.nmt.edu/publications/guidebooks/downloads/57/57_p0127_p0144.pdf |accessdate=20 September 2020}}
- {{cite encyclopedia |last1=Kues |first1=B.S. |last2=Giles |first2=K.A. |year=2004 |title=The late Paleozoic Ancestral Rocky Mountain system in New Mexico |editor1-last=Mack |editor1-first=G.H. |editor2-last=Giles |editor2-first=K.A. |encyclopedia=The geology of New Mexico. A geologic history: New Mexico Geological Society Special Volume 11 |pages=95–136 |isbn=9781585460106}}
- {{cite journal |last1=Lahee |first1=Frederic H. |title=Foreword: SYMPOSIUM ON PENNSYLVANIAN AND PERMIAN STRATIGRAPHY OF SOUTHWESTERN UNITED STATES |journal=Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists |date=August 1929 |volume=13 |issue=8 |doi=10.1306/3D932868-16B1-11D7-8645000102C1865D |url=http://archives.datapages.com/data/bulletns/1917-30/data/pg/0013/0008/0850/0883.htm?doi=10.1306%2F3D932868-16B1-11D7-8645000102C1865D |accessdate=20 September 2020|url-access=subscription }}
- {{cite journal |last1=Lloyd |first1=E. Russell |title=Capitan Limestone and Associated Formations of New Mexico and Texas |journal=AAPG Bulletin |date=1929 |volume=13 |doi=10.1306/3D932855-16B1-11D7-8645000102C1865D}}
- {{cite web |title=Geologic Formations |url=https://www.nps.gov/gumo/learn/nature/geologicformations.htm |website=Guadalupe Mountains National Park, Texas |publisher=National Park Service |accessdate=19 September 2020}}
- {{cite journal |last1=Richardson |first1=G.B. |year=1904 |title=Report of a reconnaissance in Trans-Pecos Texas north of the Texas and Pacific Railway |journal=University of Texas Mineral Survey Bulletin |volume=9 |hdl=2152/24408 |url=http://hdl.handle.net/2152/24408 |accessdate=19 September 2020}}
- {{cite journal |last1=Richardson |first1=G B. |journal=American Journal of Science |volume=25 |number=150 |date=Jun 1908 |page=474 |title=Paleozoic Formations in Trans-Pecos Texas |doi=10.2475/ajs.s4-25.150.474 |bibcode=1908AmJS...25..474R |url=https://www.proquest.com/openview/7eaf3aa5fb9908445314d6c1d845c70f/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=42176 |accessdate=20 September 2020}}
Category:Permian geology of Texas
Category:Permian formations of New Mexico