{"title":"Geological studies of the Guadalupe Mountains area, New Mexico and West Texas, to 1928","authors":"B. Kues","doi":"10.56577/ffc-57.127","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"A BSTRACT .— This paper traces observations and studies of the classic Permian sequence of the Guadalupe Mountains area through 1928. Early American expeditions in 1849 and 1850 provided the first descriptions of the southern Guadalupes, including a sketch of the southern end of the range by John R. Bartlett. Pope’s 1854 32 nd parallel Pacific Railroad expedition passed through Guadalupe Pass; geological reports by Blake (1856) and Hall (1857) included simple geological maps of the Guadalupe region. George Shumard, the first geologist to visit the range (1855), reported four stratigraphic units, including an “upper white limestone” that yielded fossils identified as Permian by B. F. Shumard (1858). Opinion shifted to a Carboniferous age based on reconnaissance surveys in the 1890s by Tarr, Cummins, and Hill. George Girty collected and studied Guadalupian fossils, which he originally considered Late Permian (1902), but by the time of publication of his monograph (1908) he had retreated from that view and by 1909 thought they were of late Carboniferous age. G. B. Richardson (1904) provided a moderately detailed geologic map, considered the Guadalupe Mountains an eastward dipping monocline with little faulting, and named the Capitan and Delaware Mountain formations, as well as the probably younger Castile and Rustler formations to the east. Later work by Girty and Richardson ascertained that Guadalupian strata passed northward into red beds and evaporites but precise correlations were not possible. Beede (1910) thought it likely that Guadalupian strata were an isolated equivalent of Lower Permian strata in the Midcontinent, but gave an age","PeriodicalId":115438,"journal":{"name":"Caves and karst of southeastern New Mexico","volume":"488 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"3","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Caves and karst of southeastern New Mexico","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.56577/ffc-57.127","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 3
Abstract
A BSTRACT .— This paper traces observations and studies of the classic Permian sequence of the Guadalupe Mountains area through 1928. Early American expeditions in 1849 and 1850 provided the first descriptions of the southern Guadalupes, including a sketch of the southern end of the range by John R. Bartlett. Pope’s 1854 32 nd parallel Pacific Railroad expedition passed through Guadalupe Pass; geological reports by Blake (1856) and Hall (1857) included simple geological maps of the Guadalupe region. George Shumard, the first geologist to visit the range (1855), reported four stratigraphic units, including an “upper white limestone” that yielded fossils identified as Permian by B. F. Shumard (1858). Opinion shifted to a Carboniferous age based on reconnaissance surveys in the 1890s by Tarr, Cummins, and Hill. George Girty collected and studied Guadalupian fossils, which he originally considered Late Permian (1902), but by the time of publication of his monograph (1908) he had retreated from that view and by 1909 thought they were of late Carboniferous age. G. B. Richardson (1904) provided a moderately detailed geologic map, considered the Guadalupe Mountains an eastward dipping monocline with little faulting, and named the Capitan and Delaware Mountain formations, as well as the probably younger Castile and Rustler formations to the east. Later work by Girty and Richardson ascertained that Guadalupian strata passed northward into red beds and evaporites but precise correlations were not possible. Beede (1910) thought it likely that Guadalupian strata were an isolated equivalent of Lower Permian strata in the Midcontinent, but gave an age
摘要:本文追溯了1928年以来瓜达卢佩山脉地区经典二叠纪层序的观察和研究。1849年和1850年的早期美国探险队提供了瓜达卢佩南部的第一次描述,包括约翰·r·巴特利特(John R. Bartlett)绘制的山脉南端的草图。1854年,波普的第32次太平洋铁路探险穿越了瓜达卢佩山口;布莱克(1856年)和霍尔(1857年)的地质报告包括瓜达卢佩地区的简单地质图。乔治·舒马德是第一个访问该山脉的地质学家(1855年),他报告了四个地层单元,包括一个“上部白色石灰石”,它产生的化石被b·f·舒马德(1858年)认定为二叠纪。根据19世纪90年代塔尔、康明斯和希尔的勘察调查,人们的观点转向石炭纪时代。乔治·吉蒂收集并研究了瓜达卢普化石,他最初认为这些化石属于晚二叠纪(1902年),但在他的专著出版(1908年)时,他放弃了这种观点,到1909年认为它们属于晚石炭世。G. B. Richardson(1904)提供了一份比较详细的地质图,认为瓜达卢佩山脉是一个向东倾斜的单斜,几乎没有断层,并命名了Capitan和Delaware山地层,以及可能更年轻的Castile和Rustler地层。吉蒂和理查森后来的工作确定了瓜达卢普地层向北进入红层和蒸发岩,但不可能进行精确的关联。Beede(1910)认为Guadalupian地层可能与中大陆的下二叠纪地层是一个孤立的等价物,但给出了一个年代