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Grayson Formation

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Journal Article
Published: 01 March 1940
Journal of Paleontology (1940) 14 (2): 93–126.
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 April 1954
GSA Bulletin (1954) 65 (4): 327–336.
...CLAUDE C ALBRITTON, JR.; WILLIAM W SCHELL; CHARLES S HILL; JOHN R PURYEAR Abstract At Grayson Bluff in Denton County, Texas, the Grayson formation (Cretaceous) is 78 feet thick. It is divisible into four lithologic units: a lower marl, lower clay, upper marl, and upper clay. Each unit contains...
Series: GSA Memoirs
Published: 01 January 1960
DOI: 10.1130/MEM83-p1
...) and the upper the Benbrook limestone member (new name); and (2) the use of the name “Denison formation” to include the units previously referred to in the Fort Worth-Weatherford area as the Denton, Weno, Pawpaw, Main Street, and Grayson formations and here considered members. Based on the author’s collections...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 February 1985
AAPG Bulletin (1985) 69 (2): 237.
... sedimentation continued through late Cenomanian. Strata older than middle Cenomanian are recognized by the occurrence of the dinoflagellate species Ovoidinium vernicosum in both formations, suggesting the stratigraphic equivalence of the Texas Grayson Formation and the Louisiana Washita facies. The species...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 March 1966
AAPG Bulletin (1966) 50 (3): 641.
...Keith Young Abstract Lower Cenomanian ammonites have been described from the Pawpaw Formation, the Main Street Limestone, the Grayson Formation, the Del Rio Claystone, the upper part of the Georgetown Limestone, and the Buda Limestone of Texas and northern Mexico. The fauna of the Buda Limestone...
Series: SEPM Special Publication
Published: 01 January 1984
DOI: 10.2110/pec.84.34.0205
EISBN: 9781565761643
... negligible influence on shelf sedimentation in the units studied. Graded sandstones of the Lower Cretaceous Grayson Formation in northeast Texas, which bear close resemblance to the storm beds in the cored units, are interpreted to have been deposited off a coast dominated by small lobate deltas that lacked...
Image
Figure13—Wilbertopora acuminata n. sp., holotype, USNM 216143, HTL-89, Bell County, Texas, Grayson Formation, Lower Cenomanian. 1, Ordinary autozooids, zone of astogenetic change and autozooids and avicularium, zone of repetition; 2, autozooids and avicularia; ovicells borne on proximal gymnocysts of numerous autozooids and those of two avicularia (upper and lower right). Scale bars 100 μm
Published: 01 January 2006
Figure 13 — Wilbertopora acuminata n. sp., holotype, USNM 216143, HTL-89, Bell County, Texas, Grayson Formation, Lower Cenomanian. 1, Ordinary autozooids, zone of astogenetic change and autozooids and avicularium, zone of repetition; 2, autozooids and avicularia; ovicells borne on proximal
Image
Figure6—Wilbertopora listokinae n. sp., Grayson County, Texas, Grayson Formation, Lower Cenomanian. 1, Paratype, USNM 216140, HTL-5, ordinary autozooids in zone of astogenetic change, three with closure plates, and ordinary autozooids, one budded intramurally, in zone of repetition. 2, Holotype, USNM 216175, HTL-5, ovicell-bearing and maternal autozooids, and one avicularium proximal to ovicell and apparently occluding its opening. 3, Paratype, USNM 526269, HTL-5, ordinary autozooid and avicularium. 4, Paratype, NHM BZ1856(1), ordinary and ovicell-bearing autozooids with calcified closure plates. 5, Paratype, NHM BZ1627, two ordinary autozooids within which other zooids have been budded intramurally, one with a calcified closure plate. Scale bar 100 μm
Published: 01 January 2006
Figure 6 — Wilbertopora listokinae n. sp., Grayson County, Texas, Grayson Formation, Lower Cenomanian. 1, Paratype, USNM 216140, HTL-5, ordinary autozooids in zone of astogenetic change, three with closure plates, and ordinary autozooids, one budded intramurally, in zone of repetition. 2
Image
Northwest to southeast cross section AA′ showing the correlation of Lower Cretaceous strata from an inner shelf setting to an outer shelf setting and the correlation to Lower Cretaceous strata in outcrop along the Guadalupe and Blanco Rivers, Comal and Hayes counties, south-central Texas, western Gulf coastal plain. The Lake Waco Formation is part of the Eagle Ford Group. The Del Rio Clay is equivalent to the Grayson Formation, and the Hensell Sand Member is equivalent to the Bexar Shale Member (Figure 3). See Figure 1 for the site of the Lower Cretaceous composite measured section, and Figure 2 for the location of wells and line of cross section. T-R = transgressive-regressive; GC = Gulf Coast.
Published: 01 December 2008
Texas, western Gulf coastal plain. The Lake Waco Formation is part of the Eagle Ford Group. The Del Rio Clay is equivalent to the Grayson Formation, and the Hensell Sand Member is equivalent to the Bexar Shale Member ( Figure 3 ). See Figure 1 for the site of the Lower Cretaceous composite measured
Image
Reflected light photomicrographs of Late Cretaceous species similar to Gavelinella breardi. 1Planulina eaglefordensis Cushman (non Moreman) USNM CC 39609 hypotype from the Eagle Ford Group (Turonian), Dallas County, Texas. (a) spiral view, (b) umbilical view, (c) apertural view. 2Gavelinella petita (Carsey) from the Grayson Formation (Lower Cenomanian), Bell County, Texas. (a) spiral view, (b) umbilical view, (c) apertural view. 3Gavelinella redmondi (Petters) USNM CC 64579 holotype from the Olini Group (Coniacian), Nariño, Columbia. a. spiral view, b. umbilical view, c. apertural view. 4Gavelinella texana (Cushman) USNM CC 24651 holotype from the Taylor Formation (Middle Campanian), Fannin County, Texas. a. spiral view, b. umbilical view, c. apertural view. Scale bar = 100 m.
Published: 01 October 2017
. 2 Gavelinella petita (Carsey) from the Grayson Formation (Lower Cenomanian), Bell County, Texas. (a) spiral view, (b) umbilical view, (c) apertural view. 3 Gavelinella redmondi (Petters) USNM CC 64579 holotype from the Olini Group (Coniacian), Nariño, Columbia. a. spiral view, b. umbilical view
Image
Conglomerate (Hanna Formation) at Grayson Ridge (below intraformational unconformity) composed of iron-rich concretionary clasts (white arrows) and very friable, imbricated sandstone clasts (black outlines).
Published: 01 August 2017
Fig. 12.— Conglomerate (Hanna Formation) at Grayson Ridge (below intraformational unconformity) composed of iron-rich concretionary clasts (white arrows) and very friable, imbricated sandstone clasts (black outlines).
Image
Morphological details of Terminasteridae and Zoroasteridae. (1, 2, 9, 10) Terminaster cancriformis (Quenstedt, 1876). (1, 2) First superomarginal, to show broad interradial contact with adjacent plate; (9, 10) Oral ossicle, original of Gale (2011a, pl. 26, figs. 6, 9) in radial (9) and interradial (10) views; Oxfordian of Savigna, Jura, France. (3, 8, 11, 12) Alkaidia sumralli Blake and Reid, 1998. (3) First superomarginal for comparison with (1, 2) and (8) actinal surface of arm, to show presence of straight forcipulate pedicellariae on adambulacrals; (11, 12) oral ossicle in radial (11) and interradial (12) views; Grayson Formation, lower Cenomanian, Dottie Lynn Lane, Fort Worth, Texas, USA. (6) NHMUK EE15225g, (7) NHMUK EE15225h, Alkaidia megaungula n. sp., straight forcipulate pedicellariae; Taba Starfish Bed, Taba, Morocco. (4, 5, 13, 14) Zoroaster fulgens Thomson, 1873, Recent, North Atlantic. (4) Oblique abactinal interradial view of individual to show enlarged first superomarginal (SM1); (5) straight forcipulate pedicellaria; (13, 14) oral ossicle, original of Gale, 2011a, pl. 26, figs. 7, 10, in radial (13) and interradial (14) views. (1–3, 5–7, 9–14) Scale bars = 500 ųm; (4) scale bar in mm; (8) scale bar = 1 mm.
Published: 01 September 2020
; ( 11, 12 ) oral ossicle in radial ( 11 ) and interradial ( 12 ) views; Grayson Formation, lower Cenomanian, Dottie Lynn Lane, Fort Worth, Texas, USA. ( 6 ) NHMUK EE15225g, (7) NHMUK EE15225h, Alkaidia megaungula n. sp., straight forcipulate pedicellariae; Taba Starfish Bed, Taba, Morocco. ( 4, 5
Image
—Sketch section showing stratigraphic relations of Woodbine to underlying Grayson and Main Street formations along outcrop in Cooke and Grayson counties, Texas.
Published: 01 February 1945
Fig. 3. —Sketch section showing stratigraphic relations of Woodbine to underlying Grayson and Main Street formations along outcrop in Cooke and Grayson counties, Texas.
Journal Article
Published: 01 January 1998
Rocky Mountain Geology (1998) 33 (1): 119–154.
...Ross Secord Abstract Mammalian fossils from two principal collecting areas in the lower Hanna Formation of the Carbon Basin comprise three faunas, the Grayson Ridge, Halfway Hill, and Sand Creek faunas. The Grayson Ridge and Halfway Hill faunas are diverse, consisting cumulatively of 29 mammalian...
FIGURES | View All (13)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1960
AAPG Bulletin (1960) 44 (1): 129.
...Robert C. Lang ABSTRACT The Ordovician Oil Creek sand is found over most of central and southern Oklahoma and parts of Cooke and Grayson counties, Texas. It is one of the best oil- and gas-producing formations in this area. Subsurface and surface control now available places the western limit...
Journal Article
Published: 01 January 2006
Journal of Paleontology (2006) 80 (1): 49–71.
...Figure 13 — Wilbertopora acuminata n. sp., holotype, USNM 216143, HTL-89, Bell County, Texas, Grayson Formation, Lower Cenomanian. 1, Ordinary autozooids, zone of astogenetic change and autozooids and avicularium, zone of repetition; 2, autozooids and avicularia; ovicells borne on proximal...
FIGURES | View All (14)
Image
Stratigraphic occurrences and ranges of taxa in the Hanna Formation from Grayson Ridge and First Sand Creek. Datum is base of Hanna Formation.
Published: 01 January 1998
Figure 7. Stratigraphic occurrences and ranges of taxa in the Hanna Formation from Grayson Ridge and First Sand Creek. Datum is base of Hanna Formation.
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 June 2003
GSA Bulletin (2003) 115 (6): 669–682.
... given × 10 –6 ) in the basal Glen Rose Formation to reach a peak value of 0.707522 ± 10 in the Walnut Clay, then gradually declines to 0.707468 ± 6 in the middle Grayson Marl. The upper Grayson Marl and lower Buda Limestone 87 Sr/ 86 Sr values decline to 0.707422 ± 9, then rise to near 0.707473...
FIGURES | View All (8)
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 July 1949
GSA Bulletin (1949) 60 (7): 1133–1182.
... Cretaceous Boquillas formation. The Lower Cretaceous is represented by the Georgetown limestone, the Grayson clay, and the Buda limestone. The lower 900–1000 feet of the Buck Hill volcanic series is named the Pruett formation, and the upper 1000–1400 feet, the Duff tuff. Lava flows up to 325 feet thick...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 April 1940
GSA Bulletin (1940) 51 (4): 597–637.
..., quartzite, and thin limestone and ranges in age from perhaps the upper Glen Rose through the Lower Fredericksburg. The Finlay formation (346+ feet thick), a limestone belonging to the Fredericksburg group, rests conformably on the Cox. Georgetown and possibly Grayson strata of the Washita group (1021+ feet...