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National Geologic Map Database
Geologic Unit: Sabana Hoyos
Map showing publication footprint
  • Usage in publication:
    • Sabana Hoyos Limestone Member*
  • Modifications:
    • Named
  • Dominant lithology:
    • Limestone
Publication:

Glover, Lynn, III, 1961, Preliminary report on the geology of the Coamo Quadrangle, Puerto Rico: U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Investigations Series Map, I-335, 1 sheet, scale 1:20,000


Summary:

The Cariblanco Formation, here named, consists of thin- to medium-bedded siltstone and sandstone that intertongues with massive conglomerate. Units of limestone, tuff, and lava in the formation are named, in order of decreasing age, the La Guaba Lava Member, the Hacienda Larga Tuff Member, Jobo Dulce Limestone Member, the Lio Juan Limestone Member, and the Sabana Hoyos Limestone Member. Overlies the Robles Formation; underlies the Coamo Formation. Age is Late Cretaceous. The Sabana Hoyos Member is a lenticular unit of gray, impure, bioclastic limestone at the top of the Cariblanco. Crops out along a fault and stratigraphic position is uncertain.

Source: GNU records (USGS DDS-6; Reston GNULEX).


Map showing publication footprint
  • Usage in publication:
    • Sabana Hoyos Limestone Member*
  • Modifications:
    • Revised
Publication:

Glover, Lynn, III, 1971, Geology of the Coamo area, Puerto Rico, and its relation to the volcanic arc-trench association: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper, 636, 102 p. [Available online from the USGS PubsWarehouse: http://pubs.er.usgs.gov/pubs/pp/pp636]


Summary:

The uppermost Sabana Hoyos Limestone Member is here removed from the Cariblanco Formation and is included as a member of the overlying Maravillas Formation. In the Coamo area the Cariblanco includes the La Guaba Lava Member near the base and the Jobo Dulce and Pio Juan Limestone Members in the upper part. The Hacienda Larga Tuff Member originally named in the Coamo quadrangle in the belief that it was a unique isochronous rock unit, has been shown to be merely a rather pure accumulation of a crystal tuff component of the matrix. Specific correlation of the crystal tuff mapped at Hacienda Larga south of the Rio Cuyon with the Hacienda Larga Member mapped north of the Rio Cuyon is not implied.

Source: GNU records (USGS DDS-6; Reston GNULEX).


For more information, please contact Nancy Stamm, Geologic Names Committee Secretary.

Asterisk (*) indicates published by U.S. Geological Survey authors.

"No current usage" (†) implies that a name has been abandoned or has fallen into disuse. Former usage and, if known, replacement name given in parentheses ( ).

Slash (/) indicates name conflicts with nomenclatural guidelines (CSN, 1933; ACSN, 1961, 1970; NACSN, 1983, 2005, 2021). May be explained within brackets ([ ]).