Coronado Sandstone | |
Type: | Formation |
Period: | Middle Cambrian |
Prilithology: | Sandstone |
Namedfor: | Coronado Mountain |
Namedby: | W. Lindgren |
Year Ts: | 1905 |
Region: | Arizona, New Mexico |
Country: | United States |
Coordinates: | 33.13°N -109.402°W |
Underlies: | El Paso Formation |
Overlies: | Precambrian basement |
Thickness: | 536feet |
The Coronado Sandstone is a geologic formation that is exposed in eastern Arizona and western New Mexico. It is Cambrian in age based on its position in the stratigraphic column.[1]
The formation consists of dark-weathering sandstone, whose grains are usually cemented by quartz but in some locations by carbonate minerals. The lower beds are arkosic (rich in feldspar but the upper beds are more nearly pure quartz. Its thickness varies from about NaNfeet. The formation also contains scattered siltstone, silty shale, and dolomite beds. It is overlain by the El Paso Formation and rests on Precambrian basement rock. It is laterally equivalent to the lower part of the Abrigo Formation. To the east, it onlaps onto the underlying basement and its upper beds grade into the Bliss Formation.[1]
The formation contains no age-diagnostic fossils but is thought to be Middle Cambrian to Late Cambrian based on its relations to other rock strata.[1] A single zircon grain from the formation has been dated at 503 million years old, establishing this is the maximum age of the formation.[2] The formation was likely deposited during a marine transgression (advance of the sea across the continent).[1]
The formation is low in porosity, giving it poor potential as a petroleum reservoir.[1]
The formation was first as the Coronado Quartzite named by Waldemar Lindgren in 1905 for outcrops near Coronado Mountain in southeastern Arizona.[3] P.T. Hayes renamed the unit as the Coronado Sandstone in 1972.[4]