The El Rito Formation is a geologic formation in New Mexico dating to the Eoceneepoch. It records a time when sediments were trapped in deep basins in western North America rather than being carried downstream to the Gulf of Mexico, so that sediments of this age in the western Gulf are mostly from the Appalachian Mountains.
Description
The formation is composed of brick-red well-consolidatedsandstone, conglomerate, and breccia. The pebbles are predominantly quartzite, with no volcaniclastics. The formation crops out over a narrow belt from the southern Tusas Mountains[1] to upper Coyote Creek.[2] In the southern Tusas Mountains, it fills narrow paleovalleys eroded in basement quartzite. Further south, the rock grades from heterogeneous breccia to a poorly sorted conglomerate. The breccia is interpreted as regolith and talus, while the conglomerate is interpreted as a high-energy stream deposit. The distinctive red color is found penetrating joints in the underlying quartzite to depths of several meters. Further south and west, the formation transitions to lighter-colored sandstone. Maximum thickness is 70 meters (230 feet).[1] A characteristic feature of the sandstone is its content of muscovite flakes.[2]
Its age is uncertain due to an almost complete lack of fossils. However, the formation was deposited in the waning phase of the Laramide orogeny under arid conditions. Paleocurrents and conglomerate clast provenance show that the source region was the Brazos uplift to the north and northeast. The formation was deposited in an asymmetrical basin formed in response to tectonic compression of the Laramide orogeny,[3] truncated to the west along the Canones fault zone.[4]
The El Rito basin likely was continuous with the Galisteo Basin before the opening of the Rio Grande rift separated the two basins starting in the Miocene. It has also long been believed that the El Rito Formation correlates with the Diamond Tail and Galisteo Formations.[3] However, although the two sets of formations rest on what is likely the same erosional surface, the El Rito Formation was deposited in eroded channels while the Galisteo and Diamond Tail Formations were deposited in an area of tectonic subsidence. Detrital zircon geochronology suggests that the Diamond Tail and Galisteo Formations were deposited first, and only after the southern part of the basin was filled with sediments did sediments begin to accumulate in the northern El Rito portion of the basin. Because sediments were accumulating in deep basins like the El Rito/Galisteo Basin in the middle Eocene, rather than being transported further downstream, the Gulf of Mexico was starved of sediment sources from the northwest. Sediments from the Appalachians were deposited in the western Gulf of Mexico instead.[5]
History of investigation
The formation was named in 1938 by Harold T.U. Smith for exposures along El Rito Creek.[1]
Logsdon, Mark J. (1981). "A preliminary basin analysis of the El Rito Formation (Eocene), north-central New Mexico". Geological Society of America Bulletin. 92 (12): 968. doi:10.1130/0016-7606(1981)92<968:APBAOT>2.0.CO;2.
Smith, Tyson M.; Sundell, Kurt E.; Johnston, Shelby N.; Guilherme Andrade, Carlos N.; Andrea, Ross A.; Dickinson, Jordan N.; Liu, Yiduo A.; Andrew Murphy, Michael; Lapen, Tom J.; Saylor, Joel E. (June 2020). "Drainage reorganization and Laramide tectonics in north‐central New Mexico and downstream effects in the Gulf of Mexico". Basin Research. 32 (3): 419–452. doi:10.1111/bre.12373. S2CID182007841.