51 6.5 Groups, Formations, and Members — Physical Geology – 2nd Edition

6.5 Sedimentary Formations

Geologists who study sedimentary rocks need ways to divide them into manageable units, and they also need to give those units names so that they can easily be referred to and compared with other rocks deposited in other places. The International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS) has established a set of conventions for grouping, describing, and naming sedimentary rock units.

The main stratigraphic unit is a , which according to the ICS, should be established with the following principles in mind:

The contrast in lithology between formations required to justify their establishment varies with the complexity of the geology of a region and the detail needed for geologic mapping and to work out its geologic history. No formation is considered justifiable and useful that cannot be delineated at the scale of geologic mapping practiced in the region. The thickness of formations may range from less than a meter to several thousand meters.

In other words, a formation is a series of beds that is distinct from other beds above and below, and is thick enough to be shown on the geological maps that are widely used within the area in question. In most parts of the world, geological mapping is done at a relatively coarse scale, and so most formations are in the order of a few hundred meters thick. At that thickness, a typical formation would appear on a typical geological map as an area that is at least a few millimeters thick.

 

File:Fountain Formation (Pennsylvanian to Permian; Manitou Springs, Colorado, USA) 2.jpg

Figure 6.5.1 An outcrop of the Fountain Formation near Colorado Springs, CO.
Media Attributions
  • Figure 6.5.1: Wikimedia Commons

License

Icon for the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

ACC Physical Geology by Mark Leatherman is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

Share This Book