Peace River Formation (Florida)

Peace River Formation
Stratigraphic range: Late Oligocene-Early Miocene
Type Geological formation
Unit of Hawthorn Group
Sub-units Bone Valley Member
Thickness 600 feet
Lithology
Primary Sand, clay, carbonates
Other Dolostone with phosphate, chert
Location
Region Central Florida
Country  United States
Type section
Named for Peace River, Florida
Location of the Peace River Formation in Florida.

The Peace River Formation is a Late Oligocene to Early Miocene geologic formation in the west-central Florida peninsula.

Age

Period: Neogene
Epoch: Miocene to Pliocene
Faunal stage: Arikareean through Hemphillian ~23.03—4.9 mya, calculates to a period of 18.13 million years

Location

The Peace River Formation appears as an outcropping or is beneath a thin overburden from Hillsborough County to Charlotte County on the southern part of the Ocala Platform. extending into the Okeechobee Basin. It is widespread in Florida and part of the intermediate confining aquifer system.

Lithology

The formation is composed of sands, clays and carbonates which are interbedded. The sands are light gray to olive gray and poorly consolidated. They are clay-like with some dolostone with a very fine to medium grained phosphate component. Carbonates are usually light gray to yellowish dolostone found in outcroppings. The dolostones are soft to hard with variably sandy, clay-like, phosphate components with opaline chert often found. The phosphate content is high enough to warrant mining.[1][2]

Three sequences of sediment deposition were defined in 1998. Five lithofacies were identified in 2000 (upper part of the formation).[3]

Fossils

  • Mollusks occur as reworked casts, molds, and limited original shell material.
  • Vertebrate fossils
  • Shark’s teeth
  • Silicified corals and wood

Members

The Bone Valley Member is a subunit of the Peace River Formation (originally the Bone Valley Formation) and occurs in a limited area on the southern part of the Ocala Platform in Hillsborough, Polk County, and Hardee County. (Webb & Crissinger). It is consistently clastic with sand-sized grains and larger grains of phosphate in a mixture of quartz sand, silt and clay. The consolidation is poor and colors range from white, light brown and yellowish gray to olive gray and blue green.[4]

See also

References

  • Finch, J., Geological essay on the Tertiary formation in America: American Journal of Science, v. 7, p. 31-43, 1823.

Further reading

  • Berkenkotter, Richard D, Application of statistical analysis in evaluating bedded deposits of variable thickness—Florida phosphate data (United States. Bureau of Mines. Report of investigations, U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Bureau of Mines (1964)
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