STRATIGRAPHY OF THE SIERRA LADRONES FORMATION TYPE AREA, SOUTHERN ALBUQUERQUE BASIN, SOCORRO COUNTY, NEW MEXICO: PRELIMINARY RESULTS
CONNELL, S.D., LOVE, D.W., JACKSON-PAUL, P.B., New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources, New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology, 801 Leroy Pl., Socorro, NM 87801; LUCAS, S.G., MORGAN, G.S., New Mexico Museum of Natural History, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87104; CHAMBERLIN, R.M., MCINTOSH, W.C., DUNBAR, N., New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources, New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology, Socorro, NM 87801
Stratigraphic sections measured in the type area of the Sierra Ladrones
Fm, 10-15 km northwest of San Acacia, NM, document the lithologic character
of this widely mapped unit, which was originally defined without a type
section. Stratigraphic sections in Arroyo Tio Lino and at Loma Blanca
(LB) encompass tilted fluvial deposits that interfinger to the west with
better cemented, piedmont sandstone and conglomerate derived from adjacent
basin-bounding uplifts. Elsewhere, these fluvial deposits are faulted
against older rocks. These fluvial deposits are typically light-gray to
very pale-brown (10YR hues), moderately to well sorted, weakly to well
cemented sandstone with trough cross stratification; mudstone is common
as rip-up clasts. South-southeast trending paleocurrent observations,
and sparse, fluvially recycled pumice pebbles at LB, which are geochemically
correlative and age-equivalent to the Peralta Tuff, indicate post-late-Miocene
south-flowing fluvial drainage. A measured section (LJ), 3 km southwest
of La Joya, NM, is tentatively correlated to the Arroyo Ojito Fm, and
contains Blancan (Pliocene) fossils (Equus simplicidens, and E. scotti(?)),
and light-brown (7.5YR) sandstone, conglomerate, and bedded mudstone deposited
by S-SE flowing streams. The upper part of the LJ section is interpreted
to have been deposited by an E-NE flowing ancestral Rio Salado. The Salas
Arroyo section, east of the Rio Grande, contains trough cross-bedded,
locally tephra-rich, fluvial sand that interfinger to the east with piedmont
deposits derived from adjacent basin-bounding uplifts.
Field relations and geologic reconnaissance suggest that an ancestral
Rio Grande deposited the Salas Arroyo section. The Tio Lino and Loma Blanca
sections, exposed in structurally higher fault blocks along the western
margin of the basin are possibly correlative to an older ancestral Rio
Grande; however, definitive correlation of the Tio Lino section to ancestral
Rio Grande deposits in the Socorro basin has not yet been established.
The LJ section represents deposition by streams of the ancestral Rio Puerco/San
Jose/Salado fluvial system, not streams from the eastern basin-margin
piedmont, as previously interpreted.
Connell, S.D., Love, D.W., Jackson-Paul, P.B., Lucas, S.G., Morgan, G.S., Chamberlin, R.M., McIntosh, W.C., and Dunbar, N., 2001, Stratigraphy of the Sierra Ladrones Formation type area, southern Albuquerque basin, Socorro County, New Mexico: Preliminary Results [abstract]: New Mexico Geology, v. 23, n. 2, p. 59.
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