Boone Formation
Boone Limestone Stratigraphic range: Mississippian | |
---|---|
Type | Formation |
Sub-units | St. Joe Limestone Member |
Underlies | Batesville Formation |
Overlies | Chattanooga Formation |
Lithology | |
Primary | Limestone |
Other | Chert |
Location | |
Region | Arkansas, Oklahoma |
Country | United States |
Type section | |
Named for | Boone County, Arkansas |
Named by | John Casper Branner and Frederick William Simonds, 1891[1][2][3] |
The Boone Formation a discrete and definable unit of cherty limestone rock strata located in northwest Arkansas and northeast Oklahoma.[1][4]
The stratigraphy of the Boone Formation dates to the Mississippian age.[4]
The Boone Formation is rich in fossils, and occasionally preserves the remains of sharks' teeth in outcrops along Buffalo National River.[5]: 64
Equivalent rocks of the Osagean in southwest Missouri include the Pierson Limestone, Fern Glen Formation, Reeds Spring Formation, (including the ), Burlington Limestone and the Keokuk Limestone.[1]
See also[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Boone Formation. |
References[]
- ^ a b c Thompson, Thomas L., 2001, Lexicon of Stratigraphic Nomenclature in Missouri, Missouri Department of Natural Resources, Division of Geology and Land Survey, Report of Investigation Number 73, p 38
- ^ Branner, J.C. (1891). "Introduction". Arkansas Geological Survey Annual Report 1888. 4: xiii.
- ^ Simonds, F.W. (1891). "The geology of Washington County". Arkansas Geological Survey Annual Report 1888. 4: 27–37.
- ^ a b Buckland, Karen Nicole Mason (August 2013). "A Geomechanical Study of the Mississippian Boone Formation". University of Arkansas.
- ^ Hunt, ReBecca K.; Santucci, Vincent L.; Kenworthy, Jason (2006). "A Preliminary Inventory of Fossil Fish from National Park Service Units" (PDF). New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin.
Categories:
- Carboniferous Kansas
- Carboniferous Arkansas
- Carboniferous geology of Oklahoma
- Carboniferous southern paleotemperate deposits
- Carboniferous southern paleotropical deposits
- Southern United States geologic formation stubs
- Arkansas geography stubs
- Carboniferous stubs