The Vadito Group is divided into the Big Rock Formation and Burned Mountain Formation in the Tusas Mountains, and the upper Vadito Group is assigned to the Glenwoody Formation in the Picuris Mountains. The Burnt Mountain Formation probably correlates with the Glenwoody Formation while the Big Rock Conglomerate corresponds to a disconformity in the Picuris Mountains. Detrital zircon dating indicates that the Marquenas Formation, formerly assigned to the Vadito Group, has a maximum age of 1435 Mya and is not part of the Vadito Group.[3]
The Vadito Group lies structurally above the Hondo Group in the Picuris Mountains. However, both groups have been severely deformed and metamorphosed, and the Vadito Group is thought to actually be the older of the two groups. Cross-bedding indicates that the Vadito Group has been overturned.[2]
Three metamorphic episodes are recognized in the group. Only the third is well constrained in time, occurring around 1420 Mya and reaching the amphibolite facies.[3] This is likely associated with the Picuris orogeny.[5]
The Vadito Group is interpreted to have been deposited in deep water in a volcanic back-arc basin (the Pilar basin) that opened during the Yavapai orogeny.[3]
The unit was designated as the Vadito Formation in 1953 by Arthur Montgomery,[12] who had first taken interest in the geology of the Picuris Mountains as a result of his wartime operation of the Harding Pegmatite Mine.[13] P.E. Long recommended raising it to group rank in 1976[14] and this was adopted by Bauer and Williams in their sweeping revision of northern New Mexico Precambrian stratigraphy.[1]
Panorama
Road cut in Vadito Group muscovite schist. The appearance of a shining metal wall is due to reflection of sunlight off the muscovite, which is layered parallel to the road cut.
Daniel, C. G.; Pfeifer, L. S.; Jones, J. V.; McFarlane, C. M. (23 July 2013). "Detrital zircon evidence for non-Laurentian provenance, Mesoproterozoic (ca. 1490-1450 Ma) deposition and orogenesis in a reconstructed orogenic belt, northern New Mexico, USA: Defining the Picuris orogeny". Geological Society of America Bulletin. 125 (9–10): 1423–1441. Bibcode:2013GSAB..125.1423D. doi:10.1130/B30804.1.
Gresens, Randall L. (1972). "Staurolite-quartzite bands in kyanite quartzite at Big Rock, Rio Arriba County, New Mexico ? A discussion". Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology. 35 (3): 193–199. doi:10.1007/BF00371214.