The formation is thought to be separated from the underlying lower Vadito Group by a significant unconformity. It is overlain by the Ortega Formation.[3]
The formation has a characteristic manganese-rich zone 30 meters thick near its upper contact with the Hondo Group that characterizes the uppermost Vadito Group throughout the region. It may have formed by syngenetic deposition from hydrothermal fluids, or a more general manganese enrichment of basin waters at the close of Vadito volcanism.[4] Another possibility is that it is a weathering horizon. Either possibility would make it an important regional time marker.[5]
History of investigation
The unit was included in the Ortega Quartzite by Arthur Montgomery in his study of the stratigraphy of the Picuris Mountains,[6] but it is metavolcanic rather than metasedimentary and so was redesignated the Glenwoody Formation of the Vadito Group by Bauer and Williams in their sweeping revision of the stratigraphy of northern New Mexico. The name refers to an old mining camp in the vicinity.[7]
Wiliams, M.L. (1987). Stratigraphic, structural, and metamorphic relationships in Proterozoic rocks from northern New Mexico [Ph.D. dissertation]:. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico.