The Welden Limestone is a geologic formation in Oklahoma. It preserves fossils dating back to the Carboniferousperiod. It is restricted to the Lawrence Uplift of southern Oklahoma. In this region, the Welden
Limestone is the only carbonate unit deposited during the span of time from Late Devonian to the Pennsylvanian.[1]
The Welden Limestone crops out as a narrow northwest to southeast belt running through sections of Pontotoc County, Oklahoma. It overlies the Woodford and pre-Welden shales and underlies the Caney Shale. The Welden Limestone is a ledge of medium-bedded limestone that separates the Woodford slope from the shale slope of the Caney. It ranges in thickness from 0.85 m in the north to 1.4 m in the south.[1]