In the Chiricahua Mountains, where the thickest section is found, the Crystal Cave Formation and Onion Saddle Formation are found between the Glance Conglomerate and the Morita Formation. A thrust fault has placed the lower Jurassic beds over the Cretaceous beds.[4]
In northwestern Sonora, in addition to the Glance Conglomerate, the Morita Formation, the Mural Limestone, and the Cintura Formation, the group includes the Cerro de Oro Formation and Arroyo Sásabe Formation.[12]
The group was deposited in the Bisbee basin, which was the central basin of the Jurassic-Cretaceous border rift belt. This rift belt was located between the Mogollon Highlands of central Arizona and New Mexico, which formed the northern shoulder of the belt, and Cordilleran (or Alisitos) volcanic arc along what is now the western side of the Gulf of California.[13] Deposition began in the late Jurassic with the Glance Conglomerate. This was followed by at least three additional marine transgressions. The second of these was restricted to western Sonora and deposited the Cerro de Oro Formation. This was followed by deposition of typical fluvial, tidal flat, and delta deposits of the Morita Formation to the west and marine beds to the east. The third and largest incursion formed the lagoon belt of the Arroyo Sásabe Formation and the marine Mural Limestone. This was followed by delta deposits of the Cintura Formation. A final small fourth incursion affected only northeastern Sonora.[12]
Fossils
The group contains fossils such as the mollusc Exogyra and the clam Trigonia characteristic of the Cretaceous.[1] The limestone formations contain fossils of scleractinian corals from a diversity of genera, including several species not found elsewhere.[14]
History of investigation
The Bisbee beds were first named by E.T. Dumble in 1902 for exposures around Bisbee, Arizona.[1] In 1904, Frederick Leslie Ransome divided the Bisbee Group into formations in the Bisbee area.[3] By 1938, the group had been mapped into the Tombstone, Arizona area[5] and into southwestern New Mexico.[9] Samuel G. Lasky defined several new formations within the group, but some of these were synonyms for each other due to fault doubling.[10]
Baron-Szabo, R.C.; González-León, C.M. (August 1999). "Lower Cretaceous corals and stratigraphy of the Bisbee Group (Cerro de Oro and Lampazos areas), Sonora, Mexico". Cretaceous Research. 20 (4): 465–497. Bibcode:1999CrRes..20..465B. doi:10.1006/cres.1999.0159.
Dickinson, William R.; Lawton, Timothy F.; Gehrels, George E. (June 2009). "Recycling detrital zircons: A case study from the Cretaceous Bisbee Group of southern Arizona". Geology. 37 (6): 503–506. Bibcode:2009Geo....37..503D. doi:10.1130/G25646A.1.
Drewes, Harald (1991). "Geologic map of the Big Hatchet Mountains, Hidalgo County, New Mexico". U.S. Geological Survey Report. doi:10.3133/i2144.
Dumble, E.T. (1902). "Notes on the geology of southeastern Arizona". American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers Transactions. 31: 103–105.
Lawton, Timothy F. (2004). "Upper Jurassic and lower Cretaceous strata of southwestern New Mexico and Northern Chihuaua, Mexico". In Mack, G.H.; Giles, K.A. (eds.). The geology of New Mexico. A geologic history: New Mexico Geological Society Special Volume 11. pp. 95–136. ISBN9781585460106.