Gobbler Formation

The Gobbler Formation is a geologic formation in the Sacramento Mountains of New Mexico. It preserves fossils dating back to the Moscovian Age of the Pennsylvanian Period.

Description
The Gobbler Formation consists of a lower section of 200-500 feet of quartz sandstone and limestone and an upper section of over 1000 feet of shales and quartz sandstones. The lower sandstone beds are well-sorted and the limestone includes black masses of chert. These beds intruded by sills possibly of Tertiary age. The upper beds interfinger with limestone assigned to the Bug Scuffle Limestone Member of the Gobbler Formation. The total thickness is 1200-1600 feet. The formation overlies the Lake Valley Limestone, from which it is separated by a subaerial erosion surface with paleochannels as deep as 100 feet The Gobbler Formation underlies the Beeman Formation.

The Bug Scuffle Limestone Member contains parasequences 3-20 meters thick whose uppermost beds show isotopic evidence of subaerial exposure.

The formation is prominently exposed at Oliver Lee Memorial State Park, where the Bug Scuffle Member forms prominent cliffs.

Fossils
The sandstone beds locally contain plant fossils. The Bug Scuffle Limestone Member is mostly sparsely fossiliferous, with occasional local concentrations of a variety of fossils including bryozoans, corals, crinoids, coralline algae, and foraminifera. These include the crinoids Lecythiocrinus and Paragassizocrinus. The base of the formation contains earliest Morrowan (Bashkirian) conodonts.

History of investigation
The unit was first named by Pray in 1954 and a type section was designated in 1961.