MUAV LIMESTONE

Cambrian Period, 505 Million Years Old, 375 Feet Thick
Ledges and slopes below the Redwall cliff

Up to Layers Overview   Introduction to Stratigraphy
   Kaibab Formation   Toroweap Formation   Coconino Sandstone   Hermit Formation   Supai Group  
Redwall Limestone   Tonto Group   Muav Limestone   Bright Angel Shale   Tapeats Sandstone   Vishnu Complex

Muav Limestone

   The Muav is a mottled, nodular, shaly, yellowish-gray limestone. In the eastern Canyon it is a yellowish cliff in the lower part, a covered slope in the middle, and a ledgy cliff, often stained red, in the upper part where it contacts the Redwall (or Temple Butte). Muav fossils include trilobites and brachiopods as well as scattered invertebrate tracks and trails. Of the Tonto formations, the Muav was deposited farthest from shore.





Muav Limestone close-up

   Just a close view of the lumpy, nodular Muav Limestone.













Up to Layers Overview   Introduction to Stratigraphy
   Kaibab Formation   Toroweap Formation   Coconino Sandstone   Hermit Formation   Supai Group  
Redwall Limestone   Tonto Group   Muav Limestone   Bright Angel Shale   Tapeats Sandstone   Vishnu Complex