NM Dept. Logo New Mexico Bureau of Mines & Mineral Resources Bulletin 117
Geology of Carlsbad Cavern and other caves in the Guadalupe Mountains, New Mexico and Texas

PLATES
Plate 1—A—Breccia exposed in the north wall of the Guadalupe Room, Carlsbad Cavern. A mudstone matrix fills the spaces between breccia clasts. White material overlying parts of the breccia is a thin carbonate crust. Photo Cyndi Mosch Seanor.

B—Possible unconformity between the underlying light-tan cobble gravel and the overlying orange silt, Junction Room, Lower Cave, Carlsbad Cavern. A light-colored carbonate crust overlies the orange silt. Photo Cyndi Mosch Seanor.

Plate 2—A—Laminated silt, Lower Cave, Carslad Cavern. Photo Cyndi Mosch Seanor.

B—Brick-red silt, Big Room, Carlsbad Cavern. White layers are gypsum derived from overlying leached gypsum blocks. Deformation took place while the silt was still wet, and was possibly caused by a piece of breakdown which fell from the roof of the cave. Photo Ronal Kerbo.

Plate 3—A—Microfolded laminations in a gypsum block near the Jumping Off Place, Big Room, Carlsbad Cavern. Photo Allan Hill.

B—Slickensides on a gypsum block, second trail tunnel, Jumping Off Place, Big Room, Carlsbad Cavern. The light-colored gypsum to the right of the slickensides is part of an overgrowth crust. Photo Alan Hill.

Plate 4—A—Bat guano in a gypsum block, Big Room, Carlsbad Cavern. The guano filtered down into a dissolved hole in the gypsum, and then both the gypsum and guano were drilled and exposed by a drip tube. Photo Ronal Kerbo.

B—Silt banding in a gypsum rind, Pump Room, Carlsbad Cavern. Photo Ronal Kerbo.


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Last Updated: 28-Jun-2007