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

TONTO GROUP

Cambrian Period, 500-520 Million Years Old, 1025 Feet Thick
Yellowish ledges on top, Tonto Platform between, brown cliff below

Tonto Group

   Geology students world-wide study the classic transgressive sequence of the Tonto Group.

   As any sea transgresses over the land it spreads a blanket of varied sediments. The sediments derive from rivers that carry their loads to the advancing edge of the sea. The rivers' heaviest particles, stones and sand, come to rest near the beach, later forming conglomerate and sandstone (called a "facies" of this sea). Lighter particles, silt and clay, settle farther out, eventually hardening to shale (another facies). Even farther from shore, organic lime muds precipitate from sea water, forming limestone, the third facies of this single sea bottom.

   The Tonto Group consists of all three of these facies: Muav Limestone on top, Bright Angel Shale between, and Tapeats Sandstone (containing a "basal conglomerate") at the bottom. If these facies formed side by side as described above, how did they come to overlie each other?

   As you butter a slice of toast from left to right, the butter on the left side of the toast was "deposited" earlier. In the case of toast, this amounts to seconds; in geologic processes it can take millions of years. As a result, a formation is not of the same age in all places. The Tonto Group rocks are all older to the west, showing that these deposits were spread from west to east.

   Now imagine that three people are assembling a six-foot sub sandwich in the local sandwich shop. The mayonaise guy starts off on the left (Tapeats Sandstone)--imagine him spreading the mayonaise as he moves to the right along the sandwich. Right behind him comes the mustard guy (Bright Angel Shale) and following the mustard comes the oil-and-vinegar guy bringing up the rear (Muav Limestone). Soon all three are spreading their condiments simultaneously. All the condiments are "older" on the left. But they are now horizontally deposited, one atop the other, just like the Tonto Group layers!

The following story pretends that people were alive when this formation was laid down. But it was long before people. The purpose is to immerse ourselves in the time period--to imagine being there.

Our tribe in Tonto time

   Always at high tide we lug our fine-mesh nets down the trail to the beach, here at the future Grand Canyon. Now it is night and the moon is full--we see the glimmering rock that looks like an old man poking up through the sand. We cast our nets for trilobites and gather seaweed. There is no life on the land except for us and a few primitive mosses. At low tide the sea retreats impossibly far--over 2 miles. It is the moon that causes these tides, a moon so much closer to Earth than it will be in the far future. But now we don't know this. Fifty thousand human generations from now (a million years)our world will look about the same as now.

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

Images, art and text copyright © Dave Thayer, 2010
None of this material may be used for commercial purposes without written permission of the author.

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