Log Springs Formation


The Log Springs Formation is a geologic formation in the Jemez, Nacimiento, and Sandia Mountains of New Mexico. Its age is poorly constrained but is thought to be Namurian.

Description

The Log Springs Formation is a sequence of continental red beds interpreted as reworked terra rossa soils and sediments from nearby highlands filling karst topography in the underlying Arroyo Penasco Group. Its outcrops are spotty everywhere but near the type section in the southern Jemez Mountains, where it is thick, and it does not crop out in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains.
The lowermost 3 meters of the formation are hematitic shales with numerous 1 to 5 mm oolites or pisolites. The upper part of the formation is a coarsening upward sequence of crossbedded argillaceous reddish sandstones. These include abundant Precambrian gneiss, greenstone, and quartz clasts.
Though lacking in fossils, the formation is estimated as being Namurian in age based on fossils in underlying and overlying beds. Its clastic beds record the beginnings of tectonic uplift associated with the Ancestral Rocky Mountains. It probably correlates with the Molas Formation of the Animas Valley.

History of investigation

Beds at this stratigraphic position were originally included in the Sandia Formation. However, when Armstrong determined that the beds were separated from the underlying Mississippian beds by an unconformity and were overlain by beds older than the bulk of the Sandia Formation, he recommended separating them into the Log Springs Formation.

Footnotes