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Old 06-28-2002, 06:08 PM   #11
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Patrick wrote:
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This does not include all of the other coeval and non-coeval regional encrinites (nor the crinoid material present outside of regional encrinites)!
Whattaya mean, "non-coeval?" They're ALL coeval, evo-boy!

edited to ask nicely: Patrick, can you point me to your piece on evaporites in West Texas? I'm sure it was on here, but I don't remember when...I found a somewhat similar argument, though, in a 1950's book on the geology of the Guadalupe Mts. area - 7000 feet of alternating limestone and sandstone in 1/4 inch thick laminations.

[ June 28, 2002: Message edited by: Coragyps ]</p>
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Old 06-28-2002, 08:16 PM   #12
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Thanks, Patrick those articles are great.

I was out in West Texas last summer. We went on the Permian Reef trail up to the top of the Capitan Reef. It wasn't as bad of a hike as expected.

We had a guide along from the Park. Great guy but I forgot to include his name in my field notebook. It was the middle of Field Camp and I was getting a bit lazy.
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Old 06-28-2002, 09:04 PM   #13
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Quote:
Originally posted by Coragyps:
<strong>Patrick, can you point me to your piece on evaporites in West Texas? I'm sure it was on here, but I don't remember when...
[ June 28, 2002: Message edited by: Coragyps ]</strong>
Ah, you mean the Ochoan series evaporites of Texas and New Mexico, which includes the Castile and Saludo formations. The Ochoan series evaporites immediately overly the Capitan limestones, have a thickness up to 1300m, a lateral subsurface extent of 150,000km2 (virtually the entire Delaware basin), and a volume of about 65,000km3 (Blatt and Tracy, Petrology, p. 329). The Castile is characterized by millimeter-scale couplets of calcium carbonate and anhydrite, about 260,000 of them. Individual cycles and groups of couplets can be correlated over dozens of miles across the Delaware Basin (Anderson, 1982. A long geoclimatic record from the Permian: Journal of Geophysical Research 87, pp. 7285-7294).

Above the Castile, the Salado Formation consists of about 600 meters worth of bedded halite and other salts. These salts show a concentric arrangement, as would be expected from a dessicated basin. Blatt and Tracy (Petrology, 1996, p. 330) write:

The distribution of sedimentary rock types in the Deleware Basin shows a crude concentric zonation, characteristic of a dessicating basin. Along the outer fringe are either fine-grained clastics or carbonate rocks, depending on the location of nearby land areas. Within this outer fringe are gypsum and/or anhydrite, followed by halite, and finally by the more soluable salts in the center of the dessicated area - salts such as polyhalite, langbeinite, carnallite, and sylvite.

Peter Scholle has a great webpage on the Permian of west Texas: <a href="http://geoinfo.nmt.edu/staff/scholle/guadalupe.html" target="_blank">Virtual Geologic Field Trip to the Permian Reef Complex, Guadalupe and Delaware Mountains, New Mexico-West Texas</a>

Patrick

[ June 28, 2002: Message edited by: ps418 ]</p>
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Old 06-28-2002, 09:49 PM   #14
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Howdy Patrick,

Your job description reminds me of when I was a private investigator. I bet you will be happier in geology.

I just changed jobs: I quit the museum and signed up with an environmental consulting firm. We'll see how it goes.
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Old 06-29-2002, 12:39 PM   #15
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Patrick: Thanks! Scholle's site is fantastic - I think I feel a road trip coming on about Februrary, when it's cool enough to go outside down there.
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