Our Geological Wonderland: An ancient seaway where St. George now exists is based on the widespread distribution of the Kaibab Formation.
Our Geological Wonderland: An ancient seaway where St. George now exists is based on the widespread distribution of the Kaibab Formation.

Our Geological Wonderland: An ancient seaway, right here in St. George

This is a tale of two trips. One trip can be physically taken, and you may have already taken it, perhaps more than once. The other trip can only be undertaken mentally, unless you have a way of actually traveling back through time.

The physical trip

If you have ever visited either the North or South Rims of the Grand Canyon, you have driven and probably walked on portions of the Colorado Plateau (Figure 1). Around the canyon area, the surface of the plateau where it’s not paved over or built up consists of a rock unit called the Kaibab Formation. This formation is the youngest unit at the canyon, and this is based on the fact that it is the top-most unit. In geology, this interpretation is based on the Law of Superposition.

Our Geological Wonderland: An ancient seaway where St. George now exists is based on the widespread distribution of the Kaibab Formation.
Figure 1. Outline of the Colorado Plateau. A. Exposure of Kaibab Formation at the Grand Canyon. B. Exposure of the Kaibab Formation in St. George along River Road.

Closer to home here in St. George, you can still visit and see the Kaibab Formation on the Colorado Plateau. It is exposed in low hills along River Road just past the turn-off to Little Valley at Horsemans Park Drive. Although new housing developments have sprung up like mushrooms along this part of River Road, the low hills are still accessible. Although in both areas the Kaibab Formation are the same geologic age, in contrast to these rocks at the Grand Canyon, the Kaibab is the oldest rock unit exposed at the surface here in St. George (Figure 2).

Our Geological Wonderland: An ancient seaway where St. George now exists is based on the widespread distribution of the Kaibab Formation.
Figure 2. Geologic map and stratigraphic column of formations in the St. George area. Each color on the map represents where each different formation is exposed at the surface. Red “X” marks the location of the Kaibab Formation along River Road. Letters A, B, and C represent young basalt lava flows.

The mental trip: The present is the key to the past

Once upon a time, as geologists tell it — actually about 270 million years ago — what is now St. George was in the middle of wide ocean seaway (Figure 3). Well, that is easy to say. The question is whether it can be proven. The answer is “yes,” by studying preserved evidence of the rock and fossil records and applying various geologic principles that have been established over the past 350 years.

Our Geological Wonderland: An ancient seaway where St. George now exists is based on the widespread distribution of the Kaibab Formation.
Figure 3. This is perhaps a reasonable representative visual of the widespread seaway that existed around St. George about 270 million years ago, but it is actually an image of a modern-day warm, shallow tropical ocean such as you might see in the Bahamas.

So back 270 million years ago, during Permian time, a reconstruction of the seaway where the future St. George was to be located can be seen in Figure 4, which represents a paleogeographic map. Maps like this are based on a lot of basic geologic field work and identification of rocks and fossils. The distribution of this Permian seaway is therefore based on recognition of the widespread distribution of the Kaibab Formation, which is found in Nevada, Arizona, Utah, and Colorado. Similarly aged rocks and fossils occur in other states, but they have been given different formation names. But because these different named rocks have very similar characteristics and fossils, they are also used to reconstruct the extent of this sea.

Geophysical evidence, isotopic studies of carbon and oxygen elements in the rocks and fossils, and paleontological data collected from the rocks that formed in this seaway indicate that St. George was located roughly 15–20 degrees north of the equator. Therefore, the climate would have been subtropical, and water in this seaway would have been warm and shallow, very much like the Bahamas today. Clearly, the ancient geography around St. George was quite different than what we see here today.

Our Geological Wonderland: An ancient seaway where St. George now exists is based on the widespread distribution of the Kaibab Formation.
Figure 4. Late Permian paleogeographic map for southwestern United States showing location of future St. George (red star). The extent of this widespread sea (light blue area) was determined by studying the preserved rock record.

During Permian time, successive layers of mostly calcium carbonate sediments were forming within this widespread warm, shallow sea, and they were being deposited along with remains of a variety of marine-dwelling organisms. As they became buried, these sediments were lithified into rocks, and many of the remains of dead organisms were incorporated into the rocks and became fossilized. As noted above, geologists have named these rocks the Kaibab Formation.

The Kaibab is mostly carbonate sedimentary rock consisting of limestone (calcium carbonate) and dolostone (calcium/magnesium carbonate). But in some areas, it contains significant amounts of sandstone. Based on comparisons with modern environments such as the Bahamas or the Florida Keys, these rocks and fossils provide evidence of the conditions existing in this widespread sea and the processes by which they formed (Figures 5 and 6).

Our Geological Wonderland: An ancient seaway where St. George now exists is based on the widespread distribution of the Kaibab Formation.
Figure 5. Modern tropical ocean. A. Shallow, mostly flat-bottom tropical ocean. B. Calcium carbonate sediments form in such oceanic environments. The carbonate forms from the breakdown of calcareous algae and other calcareous-shelled marine organisms such as clams and snails. This image was taken in warm, shallow ocean water offshore from Bikini Atoll, southwestern Pacific Ocean. Wheel and tire were blown off a military vehicle during atomic bomb testing in the 1950s and are slowly being buried by these calcareous sediments, perhaps to become a future trace fossil of human activity.
Our Geological Wonderland: An ancient seaway where St. George now exists is based on the widespread distribution of the Kaibab Formation.
Figure 6. Hand-sized sample of limestone from the Kaibab Formation and some of the variety of fossils that occur within the Kaibab with more complete examples of younger age or modern, living specimens. Most fossils in the Kaibab here in St. George are in poor to fair condition, tend to be relatively small, and are relatively easy to find.

So here in our geological wonderland, we recognize that we were once in the middle of a widespread sea that existed in a tropical environment. That is quite different from what was described in a previous article, which indicates that St. George was once in the middle of a widespread tropical desert of sand. We also know from a previous article that we were once in a large freshwater lake that was populated by a variety of dinosaurs and other animals and plants.

It is a bit hard to mentally grasp such changes because we are not used to thinking in terms of hundreds of millions or even a few million years and that in such long intervals of geologic time, immense changes can occur and have occurred on Earth (Figure 7).

Our Geological Wonderland: An ancient seaway where St. George now exists is based on the widespread distribution of the Kaibab Formation.
Figure 7. Stratigraphic column for the St. George area and description of changes in the environmental conditions over a period of about 80 million years.

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1 COMMENT

  1. Rick
    I am a geologist who studied the Kaibab and Toroweap formation in the western Grand Canyon during the mid 1970s. I recently completed a paper on the Kaibab through the Arizona Geological Survey. I have a passion and am a NCRS judge for 1965 Corvettes and own a fuelie that I have restored over a 35 year period. Let’s discuss.

    Roger

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