Neha Patil (Editor)

Coconino Sandstone

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Type
  
Sedimentary

Named for
  
Coconino Plateau

Region
  
Colorado Plateau

Overlies
  
Hermit Formation

Country
  
United States

Named by
  
N. H. Darton, 1910

Primary
  
Sandstone

Coconino Sandstone httpsncsecomfilesresizezioncrossbedsnewto

Sub-units
  
Harding Point Sandstone Member, Cave Spring Sandstone

Underlies
  
Kaibab Limestone, Toroweap Formation

Coconino Sandstone is a geologic formation named after its exposure in Coconino County, Arizona. This formation spreads across the Colorado Plateau province of the United States, including northern Arizona, northwest Colorado, Nevada, and Utah.

Coconino Sandstone Coconino SandstoneThe Most Powerful Argument Against the Flood

This rock formation is particularly prominent in southeastern Utah, where it can be seen in a number of national parks and monuments, including Zion National Park, Capitol Reef National Park, the San Rafael Swell, and Canyonlands National Park. It is also present in the Grand Canyon, where it is visible as a prominent white cliff forming layer. The thickness of the formation varies due to regional structural features, in the Grand Canyon area it is only 65 ft thick in the west, thickens to over 600 ft in the middle and then thins to 57 ft in the east. Either the Kaibab Limestone or Toroweap Formation overlies the Coconino Sandstone. The Coconino Sandstone is typically buff to white in color. It consists primarily of fine well sorted quartz grains, with minor amounts of potassium feldspar grains deposited by eolian processes (wind-deposited) approximately 260 million years ago. Several structural features such as ripple marks, sand dune deposits, rain patches, slump marks, and fossil tracks are not only well preserved within the formation, but also contribute evidence of its eolian origin.

Coconino Sandstone Geology of National Parks

Lechatelierite (silica glass), as well as coesite and stishovite (high pressure forms of SiO2) were formed during the impact of a meteorite into the Coconino Sandstone at Barringer Crater in Arizona.

Coconino Sandstone Coconino Sandstone Grand Canyon

The coconino sandstone and the creationists


Coconino Sandstone Geology of National Parks

Coconino Sandstone The Petrology of the Coconino Sandstone Permian Arizona USA

References

Coconino Sandstone Wikipedia