La Pasada Formation


The La Pasada Formation is a geologic formation in the southern Sangre de Cristo Mountains of New Mexico. It preserves fossils dating back to the early to middle Pennsylvanian.

Description

The formation is a cylic carbonate consisting of alternating limestone and shale with some thin sandstones. Total thickness is. The formation is less clastic towards its base than towards its upper portion. The shales are noncalcareous and greenish towards the base but become gray, calcareous, and often fossiliferous towards the upper portion. The formation shows considerable lateral variability, grading into the Flechado Formation to the north.
The lower half of the formation is interpreted as a shallow marine nearshore sequence with occasional nonmarine intervals with thin coal beds. The upper half was deposited under neritic offshore marine conditions with infrequent nonmarine intervals.

History of investigation

The formation was first defined in 1963 by Sutherland, who considered it correlative with the lower part of the Madera Formation. However, in 2004, Kues and Giles recommended restricting the Madera Group to shelf and marginal basin beds of Desmoinean to early Virgilian age, which excluded the La Pasada Formation. Lucas et al. also exclude the La Pasada Formation from the Madera Group.