Imo Formation

Imo Formation
Stratigraphic range: Carboniferous: Mississippian
TypeFormation
Unit ofPitkin Formation
UnderliesHale Formation
Location
RegionArkansas
CountryUnited States
Type section
Named forImo, Searcy County, Arkansas
Named byMackenzie Gordon Jr.[1]

The Imo Formation, or Imo Shale, is a geologic unit in northern Arkansas that dates to the Chesterian Series of the late Mississippian. The Imo is considered to be a member of the upper Pitkin Formation, and is the most recent Mississippian age rock in Arkansas. The Imo Shale unconformably underlies the Pennsylvanian age Hale Formation

The stratigraphic placement of this interval has long been debated. It was introduced in 1964 as the "Imo Formation," representing an interval of shale that was presumably of Mississippian and possibly of Pennsylvanian age. However, in a footnote in the first publication to use this designation, the author noted that the shale interval had been mapped into the Pennsylvanian Cane Hill Member of the Hale Formation and revoked use of the name "Imo Formation".

The name was reintroduced in 1973 as the "Imo Shale",[2] and in 2010 was classified as a member of the Mississippian age Pitkin Formation.[3]

  1. ^ Gordon, Jr., Mackenzie (1964). "Carboniferous cephalopods of Arkansas". U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper. 460: 34–38.
  2. ^ Gordon Jr., Mackenzie; Stone, Charles G. (1973). "Correlation of Carboniferous rocks of the Ouachita geosyncline with those of the adjacent shelf (abstract)". Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs. 5: 259.
  3. ^ Hutto, R. S.; Smart, E. (2010). "Reinstatement of Imo as a member of the upper Mississippian Pitkin Limestone after recent mapping in north-central Arkansas (abstract)". Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs. 42 (2): 70.