Jessica Martin : Photographer
  • Home
  • Gallery I
    • Rocks and Minerals
    • Sand and Gravel
    • Paleontology
  • Gallery II
    • Earth
    • Monochrome
    • Anthropogenic
  • About // Prints

Fulgurite (Texas)

1/9/2023

 
Fulgurite #382
Locality: West Texas
Dimensions: 8 cm (length)

Stromatolites (ichnofossil)

11/23/2022

 
Stromatolites
Formation: Wilberns Formation
Age: Cambrian
Observed April 2021.

Collapse Breccia

11/4/2022

 
Volcanic collapse breccia #587
Locality: Paisano Pass, between Alpine and Marfa, Texas
Dimensions: [to be added]

Self collected in December 2021.

Chert Nodules in Limestone

7/20/2022

 
Picture
On a hike in Big Bend National Park one December this unusual boulder sitting nearly in the middle of the path immediately caught my attention, and not just because we had to walk around it. Its freakish blobs weren't like anything that had appeared on the hike at that point, although I would later see them again along the Santa Elena Canyon trail. Not having a resource for the geology with me at the time, I simply took photos and made some guesses.

​When my husband and I returned to our AirBnB, I did a little sleuthing on the internet and found a fantastic virtual field trip created by the late Dr. Francis Redfern, as physics professor. Thanks to his informative site I learned that these boulders fell from the canyon above and that the mysterious nodules were chert; possibly the boulders are from the Cretaceous Del Carmen Limestone.

Redfern offered further ideas of why the chert appears both as nodules and veins in the limestone in Big Bend: ​
Why it is a vein, I don't know (and neither, apparently, do geologists - there are at least a couple of ideas). Maybe there was a time when silica-shell builders were predominant and a silica ooze formed on the floor of the sea, or maybe it is the result of a diagenetic process, which is a change in the sediment after it was deposited, for example by an accumulation of chert over time from fluids rich in silica. The chert looks "concretionary" to me, so I favor the latter view.

In any case, I was happy to have this new knowledge as I spotted more on a hike a few days later, although none were as glorious as the first one. If you're interested in more information on the geology of Big Bend National Park, check out the "Resources - Geology" tab on my site where I have direct links to Dr. Redfern's site as well as a few books that I found especially helpful.

References:
Redfern, Francis.  "The Rio Grande's Main Squeeze: Santa Elena Canyon", ​https://prism-redfern.org/bbvirtualtrip/elena/elena.html

Paisano Pass Volcano Collapse Breccia

7/15/2022

 
Picture
If you’ve ever gone to see the mysterious Marfa Lights in far west Texas, chances are you’ve driven right through the caldera of the massive Paisano volcano (yes, there are volcanoes, although extinct, in Texas). This particular one left a crater three miles in diameter.
These pictures show a sort of cross-section of that collapse on a roadcut on Hwy 90 between Alpine and Marfa. This area would have been inside the volcano when it was active, but once the magma chamber finally emptied itself, it could no longer support the weight of the earth above. Boulders and geologic debris fell as the volcano caved in on itself; these rocks and boulders were then re-cemented to create the "collapse breccia" you can see in the images above.

References:
Speaking of Geoscience GSA Guest Blog, "Big Bend Snapshot of History Project's Geology of the Paisano Pass Volcano", 
https://speakingofgeoscience.org/2012/04/12/big-bend-snapshot-of-history-projects-geology-of-the-paisano-pass-volcano/​

    Categories

    All
    Brachiopod
    Brazil
    British Columbia
    Bryozoan
    Bulgaria
    California
    Canada
    Canary Islands
    Carboniferous
    Cephalopods
    Cnidaria
    Colorado
    Connecticut
    Cretaceous
    Crinoids
    Devonian
    Echinoderms
    England
    Eocene
    Europe
    Fish
    Fluorescent
    Fuorescent
    Gastropod
    Geology
    Greenland
    Iceland
    Ichnofossil
    Igneous
    Interesting
    Invertebrate
    Italy
    Japan
    Metamorphic
    Mexico
    Michigan
    Minerals
    Morocco
    Namibia
    New Mexico
    Norway
    Oddity
    Other Collections
    Pegmatite
    Pennsylvanian
    Peru
    Plants
    Radioactive
    Rudists
    Sand - Collection Management
    Sand - How To Send Sands
    Sands And Sediments
    Scotland
    Sedimentary
    Sediments
    Shark
    South Australia
    Structures
    Texas
    Turkey
    Turtle
    Ultramafic

    RSS Feed


  • Home
  • Gallery I
    • Rocks and Minerals
    • Sand and Gravel
    • Paleontology
  • Gallery II
    • Earth
    • Monochrome
    • Anthropogenic
  • About // Prints