The Hidalgo Formation is a geologic formation of Maastrichtian age (latest Cretaceous)[1] in southwestern New Mexico.[2] It is of interest to geologists for the clues it preserves of the nature of Laramide deformation in the latest Cretaceous.[3]
The formation is interpreted as a volcanic center located inland of the southwest coast of the Ringbone depositional basin[4] that erupted during Laramide tectonic deformation that partitioned the basin.[8] It may correlate with the Salero Formation of southeastern Arizona.[9]
History of investigation
The formation was first named the Hidalgo Volcanics by Samuel G. Lasky in 1978 for outcroups found throughout Hidalgo County, New Mexico.[4]
^Jennings, George R.; Lawton, Timothy F.; Clinkscales, Christopher A. (June 2013). "Late Cretaceous U–Pb tuff ages from the Skunk Ranch Formation and their implications for age of Laramide deformation, Little Hatchet Mountains, southwestern New Mexico, U.S.A.". Cretaceous Research. 43: 18–25. Bibcode:2013CrRes..43...18J. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2013.02.001.