The formation is divided into two members.[3] The Ready Pay Member (formerly lower Percha) is mostly black fissile shale nearly devoid of fossils and with a total thickness of about 132 feet (40 m).[1] The Box Member (formerly upper Percha), which is much less limited in areal extent,[3] is about 47 feet (14 m) of gray to green calcareous shale with limestone nodules and beds. It is highly fossiliferous.[1]
The formation was first named as the Percha Shale by C.H. Gordon in 1907 for exposures at Percha Creek.[2] However, a type section was not designated until 1945, by F.V. Stevenson. Stevenson also divided the formation into the lower Ready Pay Member and the upper Box Member.[3][5] D. Schumacher and coinvestigators mapped the formation into southeastern Arizona and renamed it the Percha Formation in 1976.[4]
Kues, B.S. (2004). "Devonian of New 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. 59–75. ISBN9781585460106.