1-15 OF 15 RESULTS FOR

Tascotal Formation

Results shown limited to content with bounding coordinates.
Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 1979
Journal of Sedimentary Research (1979) 49 (1): 303–314.
...A. W. Walton Abstract A volcanic sediment apron in the Tascotal Formation consists mostly of sand-sized debris derived from nearby volcanic centers. In the apron, a progradational sequence of sheetflood deposits gives way upward to aggradational deposits formed as major feeder channels were...
Series: AAPG Studies in Geology
Published: 01 January 1981
DOI: 10.1306/St13421C15
EISBN: 9781629811819
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 April 1981
AAPG Bulletin (1981) 65 (4): 761–762.
...Christopher D. Henry; Timothy W. Duex ABSTRACT The Pruett, Duff, and Tascotal Formations (Eocene-Oligocene) form a 1-km thick sequence of tuffaceous sediment composed, prior to diagenesis, of rock and mineral fragments and volcanic glass. Ground-water diagenesis dissolved glass and some mineral...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 December 1953
GSA Bulletin (1953) 64 (12): 1353–1386.
... the intrusion of riebeckite soda rhyolite which forms numerous hills in the southeast part of the area. The intrusives contributed abundant large boulders to the conglomerate of the upper beds of the Tascotal formation that lap on the slopes of the rhyolite hills. Boulders of Caballos novaculite and of black...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 February 1981
Economic Geology (1981) 76 (1): 69–88.
...Anthony W. Walton; William E. Galloway; Christopher D. Henry Abstract Uranium can be released from volcanic glass shards by solution of the shards. Studies of the Tertiary Tascotal Formation of Trans-Pecos Texas suggest that total solution of shards during diagenesis in an open meteoric flow system...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 October 1986
GSA Bulletin (1986) 97 (10): 1192–1207.
...ANTHONY W. WALTON Abstract The nature and history of volcanic activity in the Trans-Pecos volcanic field of Texas controlled depositional timing, environmental distribution, and lithologic character of associated sediments. Tuffaceous and epiclastic sedimentary rocks of the Tascotal and Fresno...
Series: GSA Special Papers
Published: 01 January 1990
DOI: 10.1130/SPE250-p1
..., and the Lower Devonian-Mississippian Caballos Novaculite rests unconformably on the Upper Ordovician Maravillas Formation. More than 1.4 km of flysch, from a source to the southeast, forms the Mississippian-Pennsylvanian Tesnus Formation. No Paleozoic rocks younger than Early Pennsylvanian (Morrowan Series...
Journal Article
Published: 21 August 2015
The Journal of Geology (2015) 123 (5): 385–403.
.... 4 B ). This fault parallels and is southwest of the main Chalk Draw Fault, which has an ∼800-m throw in this location. The fault cuts the Del Rio and Buda Formations and ultimately tips out into the Upper Cretaceous Boquillas Formation, where small-scale intense folding occurs near the fault tip...
FIGURES | View All (10)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 June 2002
AAPG Bulletin (2002) 86 (6): 935–959.
... are characterized by highly segmented border faults and offset subbasins in the rift zone. Along-strike displacement transfer in the model rifts occurred as a result of formation of two types of accommodation zones. High-relief, extension-parallel accommodation zones typically are found in 60 degrees rifts...
FIGURES | View All (25)
Journal Article
Published: 01 January 2013
Bulletin de la Société Géologique de France (2013) 184 (1-2): 35–45.
... tectonic evolution . – Tectonics , 2 , 633 – 643 . Walton A.W. ( 1979 ). – Volcanic sediment apron in the Tascotal Formation (Oligocene?), Trans-Pecos Texas . – J. Sediment. Res. , 49 , 303 – 314 . Wegner W. Worner G. Harmon R.S. Jicha B.R. ( 2011 ). – Magmatic...
FIGURES | View All (5)
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 March 2009
Geology (2009) 37 (3): 203–206.
... in the Ainsa basin. The depositional style outlined in this paper might be common to other active margins where siliciclastic basins evolve between active thrusts. REFERENCES CITED 0950-091X(1992)004[0335:TASCOT]2.0.CO;2 Bentham P.A...
FIGURES | View All (4)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 June 1954
AAPG Bulletin (1954) 38 (6): 1139–1155.
... (Ochoa) evaporite section. This basin occupies the deeper part of the pre-existing West Texas basin, and little is known of the Pennsylvanian and older formations in its deepest part. Outcrop studies in the mountain areas at the west and southwest indicate that a full pre-Pennsylvanian section should...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Published: 15 March 2008
Bulletin de la Société Géologique de France (2008) 179 (2): 147–160.
... Peguis, SP: Sierra Ponce, Tm: Terlinga monocline, TMf: Tascotal Mesa fault, TSB: Terlingua-Solitario block. F ig . 2. – Carte géologique simplifiée de la zone d’étude, Texas méridional et Chihuahua septentrional. This N110 trending left lateral strike slip fault zone observable...
FIGURES | View All (13)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 15 June 2021
AAPG Bulletin (2021) 105 (6): 1099–1147.
.... Cenozoic (late Paleogene–Neogene) western uplift tilted the basin to the east. Each of these events has a significant influence on the basin petroleum systems. The basin has multiple source rocks and petroleum systems formed during various stages of basin development. During the formation of the early...
FIGURES | View All (25)
Book Chapter

Published: 01 April 2013
DOI: 10.1130/2013.2494(00)
...—Thirtynine Mile volcanic field; TPVF—Trans-Pecos volcanic field. Additional geographic and geologic features are denoted by small capital letters: AE—Abiquiu embayment; CG—Culebra graben; EFZ—Embudo fault zone; TCFZ—Tijeras-Cañoncito fault zone; TMFZ—Tascotal Mesa fault zone. AZ—Arizona; CO—Colorado; NM—New...
FIGURES