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La Tuna Formation

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La Tuna Formation
Stratigraphic range: Bashkirian PreꞒ O S D C P T J K Pg N
TypeFormation
UnderliesBerino Formation
OverliesRancheria Formation, Helms Formation
Thickness340–423 ft (104–129 m)
Lithology
PrimaryLimestone
OtherChert, shale
Location
Coordinates31°58′0″N 106°31′30″W / 31.96667°N 106.52500°W / 31.96667; -106.52500
RegionNew Mexico
CountryUnited States
Type section
Named forLa Tuna (Anthony, New Mexico)
Named byL.A. Nelson
Year defined1937
La Tuna Formation is located in the United StatesLa Tuna FormationLa Tuna Formation (the United States)Show map of the United StatesLa Tuna Formation is located in New MexicoLa Tuna FormationLa Tuna Formation (New Mexico)Show map of New Mexico

The La Tuna Formation is a geologic formation in the Franklin Mountains of southern New Mexico and western Texas and the Hueco Mountains of western Texas. It preserves fossils dating back to the Bashkirian Age of the early Pennsylvanian.

Description

The unit consists mostly of massive gray limestone with minor interbedded shale. The limestone is locally cherty and the upper beds include some thin shale lenses and algal mounds. The total thickness is 340–423 ft (104–129 m). The formation lies on the Helms Formation or Rancheria Formation and is overlain by the Berino Formation.

The formation contains detrital zircon grains of Cambrian age, which provides supporting evidence for a landmass thought to be present in Pennsylvanian time in the location of the modern Florida Mountains. It is thought to have been laid down in the Horquilla Seaway, a continental shelf environment on the southwest coast of Pangaea.

Fossils

The formation contains crinoids and other fossils consistent with deposition in the Morrowan (Bashkirian). The upper beds include some algal mounds. The formation contains a diverse gastropod fauna, as well as the foraminiferan Millerella, the demosponge Chaetetes. and the coral Petalaxis. The base of the formation contains earliest Morrowan conodonts. The red alga Masloviporidium delicatum has been reported in the formation. Cordaites has been reported within a sandstone bed within the formation.

History of investigation

The unit was designated the La Tuna Member of the Magdalena Group by L.A. Nelson in 1937. In 2001, B. Kues recommended abandoning the Magdalena Group and raising its members, including the La Tuna, to formation rank. Spencer G. Lucas and Karl Krainer have recommended demoting the La Tuna Formation in New Mexico to member rank within the Horquilla Formation.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Harbour 1972.
  2. ^ Kues & Giles 2004.
  3. ^ Lucas & Krainer 2020.
  4. ^ Kues 2001.
  5. ^ Nelson 1940.
  6. Amato 2019.
  7. Metcalf & Johnson 1971.
  8. West & Kershaw 1991.
  9. Batten 1995.
  10. Lane 1974.
  11. Groves & Mamet 1985.
  12. Nelson 1937.

References

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