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Yeso Group

The Yeso Group is a group of geologic formations in New Mexico. It contains fossils characteristic of the Kungurian Age of the early Permian Period.[1][2]

Yeso Group
Stratigraphic range: Kungurian
Yeso Group at its type location northeast of Socorro, New Mexico, USA
TypeGroup
Sub-unitsSee text
UnderliesGlorieta Sandstone
OverliesAbo Formation
ThicknessUp to 309 m (1,014 ft)
Lithology
PrimarySandstone
OtherGypsum
Location
Coordinates34°09′57″N 106°44′47″W / 34.1659°N 106.7465°W / 34.1659; -106.7465
Approximate paleocoordinates4°48′N 34°24′W / 4.8°N 34.4°W / 4.8; -34.4
RegionNew Mexico
CountryUnited States
Type section
Named forMesa del Yeso
Named byW.T. Lee
Year defined1909
Coordinates34°12′06″N 106°46′32″W / 34.2017512°N 106.7754422°W / 34.2017512; -106.7754422
Yeso Group (New Mexico)

Description Edit

The Yeso Group is lithologically complex, ranging from marine shelf carbonate rock to the south through shoreline and sabkha beds to eolian dune and sheet sand deposits to the north.[2] It is exposed in the mountains and other uplifts bordering the Rio Grande Rift and in the Pecos River valley.[3][4][5] It is present in the subsurface in the Raton Basin.[6] The group records a major marine transgression from the south during the early Leonardian (Kungurian).[7]

 
Yeso Group outcrop at Red Rocks, New Mexico

In the Jemez Mountains, the group consists of massive cross-bedded lower beds (De Chelly Sandstone) and thinner upper beds (San Ysidro Formation) suggesting a more fluvial depositional environment.[8] The Yeso Group is exposed extensively in the Jemez Mountains, but pinches out in the northern Jemez, delineating the northern limit of the dune field from which it arose.[9]

Farther south, the group is divided into the Arroyo de Alamillo and Los Vallos Formations.[10] It transitions from continental to shallow marine in character from north to south, with the lithology changing from eolian and sand sheet deposits in the north to sabkha deposits of gypsum and carbonate rock to the south.[5] Thus the Arroyo de Alamillo Formation is siltstone, ripple-laminated sandstone, and lesser dolomitic limestone, in contrast with the eolian beds of the De Chelly Formation, and the Los Vallos Formation is 42% sandstone, 28% siltstone, and 24% gypsum, in contrast with the thinly bedded sandstone of the San Ysidro Formation.[10]

The Los Vallos Formation is divided into the Torres, Cañas and Joyita Members. At Abo Pass in central New Mexico, the Torres is 180 metres (590 ft) of gypsiferous siliclastic sedimentary rock and gypsum with minor dolomite; the Cañas is 16 to 52 metres (52 to 171 ft) of mostly gypsum; and the Joyita Member is 21 metres (69 ft) of redbed sandstone.[11]

The group is conformable with both the underlying Abo Formation and the overlying Glorieta Sandstone.[5]

Fossil content Edit

The Yeso Group is largely devoid of fossils. However, continued field work has gradually built up a record of marine microfossils, mostly algae and foraminiferans, trace fossils (including tetrapod footprints), and terrestrial plant fossils. In 2018, a mold of an incomplete, articulated skeleton of a eupelycosaur was discovered in lower Yeso strata.[12] The microfossils date the Yeso Group to the Kungurian.[13]

Tetrapod trackways have been found in the De Chelly Sandstone in the Lucero uplift. These are too poorly preserved for precise classification.[14]

Economic geology Edit

Carbon dioxide was produced from subsurface Yeso beds in the Bueyeros, New Mexico field. Production was limited from 1931 to 1980, but increased demand for carbon dioxide for enhanced oil recovery led to construction of pipelines to the Permian Basin. Production totaled 3.3 trillion ft3 by 2018, with an estimated 5 to 10 trillion ft3 still recoverable. Isotope studies suggest the carbon dioxide originated in the earth's mantle and the Yeso Group is merely a reservoir rock. Carbon dioxide accumulates in the Tubb Sandstone Member (sometimes also known as the Drinkard Sandstone[15]) and is capped by the Cimarron Anhydrite Member.[6]

History of investigation Edit

The unit was designated as the Yeso Formation of the (now-abandoned) Manzano Group by W.T. Lee in 1909 for Mesa del Yeso, a small mesa 12 miles northeast of Socorro, New Mexico.[16] Darton redesignated it as a member of the Chupadera Formation in 1922,[17] but Needham and Bates returned it to its original designation as a formation within the Manzano Group in 1943. Needham and Bates also removed the Glorieta Sandstone from the formation.[3]

Kelley and Wood divided the formation into members in 1946, including the lowermost Mesita Blanca Member.[18] Baars pointed out in 1962 that the Meseta Blanca Member is indistinguishable from the De Chelly Sandstone,[4] but this redesignation was not widely accepted until the stratigraphic revisions of Lucas et al. in 2005, which also raised the formation to group rank.[10] The promotion of the Yeso Formation to group rank and the abandonment of the Meseta Blanca Member remains controversial.[19]

References Edit

  1. ^ Stanesco 1991, p. M1.
  2. ^ a b Kues & Giles 2004, pp. 119–123.
  3. ^ a b Needham & Bates 1943.
  4. ^ a b Baars 1962.
  5. ^ a b c Stanesco 1991.
  6. ^ a b Broadhead 2019.
  7. ^ Kues & Giles 2004, p. 119.
  8. ^ Wood & Northrop 1946.
  9. ^ Kelley et al. 2006.
  10. ^ a b c Lucas, Krainer & Colpitts 2005a.
  11. ^ Lucas et al. 2016.
  12. ^ Lucas et al. 2005b.
  13. ^ Vachard, Krainer & Lucas 2015.
  14. ^ Voigt & Lucas 2016.
  15. ^ Resnick, J.R. (1989). Clay mineral analysis of well chips and hand samples from the Permian Yeso and Abo Formations, Roswell Basin area, southeastern New Mexico (dissertation) (PDF). New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
  16. ^ Lee 1909.
  17. ^ Darton 1922.
  18. ^ Kelley & Wood 1946.
  19. ^ Cather et al. 2013.

Bibliography Edit

  • Baars, D.L. (1962). "Permian System of Colorado Plateau". American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin. 46 (2): 149–218. doi:10.1306/BC74376F-16BE-11D7-8645000102C1865D.
  • Broadhead, Ronald F. (2019). "Carbon Dioxide in the Subsurface of Northeastern New Mexico" (PDF). New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Series. 70: 101–108. Retrieved 19 May 2020.
  • Cather, S.M.; Zeiger, Kate E.; Mack, Greg H.; Kelley, Shari A. (2013). "Toward standardization of Phanerozoic stratigraphic nomenclature in New Mexico". New Mexico Geological Society Spring Meeting: 12. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.667.3513.
  • Darton, N.H. (1922). "Geologic structure of parts of New Mexico [Sandia and Manzano Mountains]" (PDF). U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin (726–E): E173–E275. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
  • Kelley, S.A.; Lawrence, J.R.; Zeiger, K.E.; Osburn, G.R.; Lucas, S.G. (2006). "Geologic Map of the Arroyo del Agua Quadrangle, Rio Arriba County, New Mexico" (PDF). New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources Open-File Geologic Map Series. 46 (124). Retrieved 21 September 2020.
  • Kelley, V.C.; Wood, G.H., Jr. (1946). "Geology of the Lucero uplift, Valencia, Socorro, and Bernalillo Counties, New Mexico". U.S. Geological Survey Oil and Gas Investigations Preliminary Map. OM-47. Retrieved 21 September 2020.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Kues, B.S.; Giles, K.A. (2004). "The late Paleozoic Ancestral Rocky Mountain system in New Mexico". In Mack, G.H.; Giles, K.A. (eds.). The geology of New Mexico. A geologic history: New Mexico Geological Society Special Volume 11. pp. 95–136. ISBN 9781585460106.
  • Lee, W.H. (1909). "Stratigraphy of the Manzano group of the Rio Grande Valley, New Mexico". In Lee, W.H.; Girty, G.H. (eds.). The Manzano group of the Rio Grande valley, New Mexico. Vol. 389. U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin. pp. 5–40. doi:10.3133/b389.
  • Lucas, Spencer G.; Krainer, Karl; Colpitts, Robert M., Jr. (2005a), Lucas, S.G.; Zeiger, K.E.; Spielmann, J.A. (eds.), "Abo-Yeso (lower Permian) stratigraphy in central New Mexico", The Permian of Central New Mexico, New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin, vol. 31, pp. 101–117{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Lucas, Spencer G.; Krainer, Karl; Oviatt, Charles G.; Vachard, Daniel; Berman, David S.; Henrici, Amy C. (2016). "The Permian system at Abo Pass, Central New Mexico (USA)" (PDF). New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Series. 67: 313–350. Retrieved 16 June 2021.
  • Lucas, Spencer G.; Thorpe, Emily D.; Berman, David S.; Rinehart, Larry F.; Santucci, Vincent L.; Henrici, Amy C. (2005b), Lucas, S.G.; Zeiger, K.E.; Spielmann, J.A. (eds.), "Discovery of a tetrapod body fossil in the lower Permian Yeso Group, Central New Mexico", The Permian of Central New Mexico, New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin, vol. 31, pp. 493–498
  • Needham, C.E.; Bates, R.L. (1943). "Permian type sections in central New Mexico". Geological Society of America Bulletin. 54 (11): 1653–1667. doi:10.1130/gsab-54-1653.
  • Stanesco, John D. (1991). "Sedimentology and Depositional Environments of the Lower Permian Yeso Formation, Northwestern New Mexico" (PDF). U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin (1808).
  • Vachard, D; Krainer, K; Lucas, SG (2015). "Late Early Permian (late Leonardian; Kungurian) algae, microproblematica, and smaller foraminifers from the Yeso Group and San Andres Formation (New Mexico; USA)". Palaeontologia Electronica. doi:10.26879/433.
  • Voigt, Sebastian; Lucas, Spencer G. (2016). "Permian tetrapod footprints from the Lucero Uplift, central New Mexico" (PDF). New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Series. 67: 387–395. Retrieved 12 June 2020.
  • Wood, G.H.; Northrop, S.A. (1946). "Geology of Nacimiento Mountains, San Pedro Mountain, and adjacent plateaus in parts of Sandoval and Rio Arriba Counties, New Mexico". U.S. Geological Survey Oil and Gas Investigations. Preliminary Map OM-57.

yeso, group, confused, with, yezo, group, group, geologic, formations, mexico, contains, fossils, characteristic, kungurian, early, permian, period, stratigraphic, range, kungurian, preꞒ, type, location, northeast, socorro, mexico, usatypegroupsub, unitssee, t. Not to be confused with Yezo Group The Yeso Group is a group of geologic formations in New Mexico It contains fossils characteristic of the Kungurian Age of the early Permian Period 1 2 Yeso GroupStratigraphic range Kungurian PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NYeso Group at its type location northeast of Socorro New Mexico USATypeGroupSub unitsSee textUnderliesGlorieta SandstoneOverliesAbo FormationThicknessUp to 309 m 1 014 ft LithologyPrimarySandstoneOtherGypsumLocationCoordinates34 09 57 N 106 44 47 W 34 1659 N 106 7465 W 34 1659 106 7465Approximate paleocoordinates4 48 N 34 24 W 4 8 N 34 4 W 4 8 34 4RegionNew MexicoCountryUnited StatesType sectionNamed forMesa del YesoNamed byW T LeeYear defined1909Coordinates34 12 06 N 106 46 32 W 34 2017512 N 106 7754422 W 34 2017512 106 7754422Yeso Group New Mexico Contents 1 Description 2 Fossil content 3 Economic geology 4 History of investigation 5 References 5 1 BibliographyDescription EditThe Yeso Group is lithologically complex ranging from marine shelf carbonate rock to the south through shoreline and sabkha beds to eolian dune and sheet sand deposits to the north 2 It is exposed in the mountains and other uplifts bordering the Rio Grande Rift and in the Pecos River valley 3 4 5 It is present in the subsurface in the Raton Basin 6 The group records a major marine transgression from the south during the early Leonardian Kungurian 7 nbsp Yeso Group outcrop at Red Rocks New MexicoIn the Jemez Mountains the group consists of massive cross bedded lower beds De Chelly Sandstone and thinner upper beds San Ysidro Formation suggesting a more fluvial depositional environment 8 The Yeso Group is exposed extensively in the Jemez Mountains but pinches out in the northern Jemez delineating the northern limit of the dune field from which it arose 9 Farther south the group is divided into the Arroyo de Alamillo and Los Vallos Formations 10 It transitions from continental to shallow marine in character from north to south with the lithology changing from eolian and sand sheet deposits in the north to sabkha deposits of gypsum and carbonate rock to the south 5 Thus the Arroyo de Alamillo Formation is siltstone ripple laminated sandstone and lesser dolomitic limestone in contrast with the eolian beds of the De Chelly Formation and the Los Vallos Formation is 42 sandstone 28 siltstone and 24 gypsum in contrast with the thinly bedded sandstone of the San Ysidro Formation 10 The Los Vallos Formation is divided into the Torres Canas and Joyita Members At Abo Pass in central New Mexico the Torres is 180 metres 590 ft of gypsiferous siliclastic sedimentary rock and gypsum with minor dolomite the Canas is 16 to 52 metres 52 to 171 ft of mostly gypsum and the Joyita Member is 21 metres 69 ft of redbed sandstone 11 The group is conformable with both the underlying Abo Formation and the overlying Glorieta Sandstone 5 Fossil content EditThe Yeso Group is largely devoid of fossils However continued field work has gradually built up a record of marine microfossils mostly algae and foraminiferans trace fossils including tetrapod footprints and terrestrial plant fossils In 2018 a mold of an incomplete articulated skeleton of a eupelycosaur was discovered in lower Yeso strata 12 The microfossils date the Yeso Group to the Kungurian 13 Tetrapod trackways have been found in the De Chelly Sandstone in the Lucero uplift These are too poorly preserved for precise classification 14 Economic geology EditCarbon dioxide was produced from subsurface Yeso beds in the Bueyeros New Mexico field Production was limited from 1931 to 1980 but increased demand for carbon dioxide for enhanced oil recovery led to construction of pipelines to the Permian Basin Production totaled 3 3 trillion ft3 by 2018 with an estimated 5 to 10 trillion ft3 still recoverable Isotope studies suggest the carbon dioxide originated in the earth s mantle and the Yeso Group is merely a reservoir rock Carbon dioxide accumulates in the Tubb Sandstone Member sometimes also known as the Drinkard Sandstone 15 and is capped by the Cimarron Anhydrite Member 6 History of investigation EditThe unit was designated as the Yeso Formation of the now abandoned Manzano Group by W T Lee in 1909 for Mesa del Yeso a small mesa 12 miles northeast of Socorro New Mexico 16 Darton redesignated it as a member of the Chupadera Formation in 1922 17 but Needham and Bates returned it to its original designation as a formation within the Manzano Group in 1943 Needham and Bates also removed the Glorieta Sandstone from the formation 3 Kelley and Wood divided the formation into members in 1946 including the lowermost Mesita Blanca Member 18 Baars pointed out in 1962 that the Meseta Blanca Member is indistinguishable from the De Chelly Sandstone 4 but this redesignation was not widely accepted until the stratigraphic revisions of Lucas et al in 2005 which also raised the formation to group rank 10 The promotion of the Yeso Formation to group rank and the abandonment of the Meseta Blanca Member remains controversial 19 References Edit Stanesco 1991 p M1 a b Kues amp Giles 2004 pp 119 123 a b Needham amp Bates 1943 a b Baars 1962 a b c Stanesco 1991 a b Broadhead 2019 Kues amp Giles 2004 p 119 Wood amp Northrop 1946 Kelley et al 2006 a b c Lucas Krainer amp Colpitts 2005a Lucas et al 2016 Lucas et al 2005b Vachard Krainer amp Lucas 2015 Voigt amp Lucas 2016 Resnick J R 1989 Clay mineral analysis of well chips and hand samples from the Permian Yeso and Abo Formations Roswell Basin area southeastern New Mexico dissertation PDF New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology Retrieved 13 January 2022 Lee 1909 Darton 1922 Kelley amp Wood 1946 Cather et al 2013 Bibliography Edit Baars D L 1962 Permian System of Colorado Plateau American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin 46 2 149 218 doi 10 1306 BC74376F 16BE 11D7 8645000102C1865D Broadhead Ronald F 2019 Carbon Dioxide in the Subsurface of Northeastern New Mexico PDF New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Series 70 101 108 Retrieved 19 May 2020 Cather S M Zeiger Kate E Mack Greg H Kelley Shari A 2013 Toward standardization of Phanerozoic stratigraphic nomenclature in New Mexico New Mexico Geological Society Spring Meeting 12 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 667 3513 Darton N H 1922 Geologic structure of parts of New Mexico Sandia and Manzano Mountains PDF U S Geological Survey Bulletin 726 E E173 E275 Retrieved 21 September 2020 Kelley S A Lawrence J R Zeiger K E Osburn G R Lucas S G 2006 Geologic Map of the Arroyo del Agua Quadrangle Rio Arriba County New Mexico PDF New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources Open File Geologic Map Series 46 124 Retrieved 21 September 2020 Kelley V C Wood G H Jr 1946 Geology of the Lucero uplift Valencia Socorro and Bernalillo Counties New Mexico U S Geological Survey Oil and Gas Investigations Preliminary Map OM 47 Retrieved 21 September 2020 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Kues B S Giles K A 2004 The late Paleozoic Ancestral Rocky Mountain system in New Mexico In Mack G H Giles K A eds The geology of New Mexico A geologic history New Mexico Geological Society Special Volume 11 pp 95 136 ISBN 9781585460106 Lee W H 1909 Stratigraphy of the Manzano group of the Rio Grande Valley New Mexico In Lee W H Girty G H eds The Manzano group of the Rio Grande valley New Mexico Vol 389 U S Geological Survey Bulletin pp 5 40 doi 10 3133 b389 Lucas Spencer G Krainer Karl Colpitts Robert M Jr 2005a Lucas S G Zeiger K E Spielmann J A eds Abo Yeso lower Permian stratigraphy in central New Mexico The Permian of Central New Mexico New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin vol 31 pp 101 117 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lucas Spencer G Krainer Karl Oviatt Charles G Vachard Daniel Berman David S Henrici Amy C 2016 The Permian system at Abo Pass Central New Mexico USA PDF New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Series 67 313 350 Retrieved 16 June 2021 Lucas Spencer G Thorpe Emily D Berman David S Rinehart Larry F Santucci Vincent L Henrici Amy C 2005b Lucas S G Zeiger K E Spielmann J A eds Discovery of a tetrapod body fossil in the lower Permian Yeso Group Central New Mexico The Permian of Central New Mexico New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin vol 31 pp 493 498 Needham C E Bates R L 1943 Permian type sections in central New Mexico Geological Society of America Bulletin 54 11 1653 1667 doi 10 1130 gsab 54 1653 Stanesco John D 1991 Sedimentology and Depositional Environments of the Lower Permian Yeso Formation Northwestern New Mexico PDF U S Geological Survey Bulletin 1808 Vachard D Krainer K Lucas SG 2015 Late Early Permian late Leonardian Kungurian algae microproblematica and smaller foraminifers from the Yeso Group and San Andres Formation New Mexico USA Palaeontologia Electronica doi 10 26879 433 Voigt Sebastian Lucas Spencer G 2016 Permian tetrapod footprints from the Lucero Uplift central New Mexico PDF New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Series 67 387 395 Retrieved 12 June 2020 Wood G H Northrop S A 1946 Geology of Nacimiento Mountains San Pedro Mountain and adjacent plateaus in parts of Sandoval and Rio Arriba Counties New Mexico U S Geological Survey Oil and Gas Investigations Preliminary Map OM 57 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yeso Group amp oldid 1121142947, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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