The formation is dominantly dolomite with areas or layers of pure limestone. A shaley or glauconitic zone occurs in the lower portion and the base contains sand and conglomerate or breccia where the formation overlaps the Lamotte and lies directly on the granite of the mountain core.[5]
Stratigraphy
Early geologists offered a variety of names for what is now known as the Bonneterre Formation.[1] In 1894,
Missouri state geologist Arthur Winslow proposed St. Francois limestone as a name for thick limestone beds,[6] including everything between what are now known as the Lamotte Sandstone and the St. Peter Sandstone.[7] He described the lower part of that formation (now comprising the Bonneterre and the Elvins Group)[8] separately as the St. Joseph limestone.[9]Charles Rollin Keyes's Fredericktown limestone included everything between the Lamotte and the Potosi Dolomite when he first described it in 1896, but his later uses of the name were in a more restricted sense equivalent to the modern Bonneterre.[10]
The Bonneterre is conformably overlain by the Davis Formation. The Bonneterre Formation lies conformably on the Lamotte Sandstone and in places lies directly on the Proterozoicigneous core of the mountains.
Thickness
In the outcrop area the Bonneterre has an average thickness of 375 to 400 feet. It is present in the subsurface throughout Missouri and has a maximum recorded thickness of 1580 feet under Pemiscot County in the Missouri Bootheel.[5]
^Nason, F.L. (1901). "On the presence of a limestone conglomerate in the lead region of St. Francois County, Missouri". American Journal of Science. 4th. 12: 358–361. doi:10.2475/ajs.s4-12.71.358.
^Lyle, J. R. (1977). "Petrography and carbonate diagenesis of the Bonneterre Formation in the Viburnum Trend area, Southeast Missouri". Economic Geology. 72 (3): 420–434. Bibcode:1977EcGeo..72..420L. doi:10.2113/gsecongeo.72.3.420.
^Hu, Chung-Hung (1979). "692. Ontogenies of four Upper Cambrian trilobites from the Bonneterre Dolomite, Missouri". Transactions and Proceedings of the Paleontological Society of Japan. New Series. 1978 (111): 348–357. doi:10.14825/prpsj1951.1978.111_348.
^ abStinchcomb, B. L (1975). "Paleoecology of two new species of Late Cambrian Hypseloconus (Monoplacophora) from Missouri". Journal of Paleontology. 49 (2): 416–421. JSTOR1303372.
^Stinchcomb, Bruce; Angeli, Nicholas (2002). "New Cambrian and Lower Ordovician monoplacophorans form the Ozark Uplift, Missouri". Journal of Paleontology. 76 (6): 965–974. doi:10.1666/0022-3360(2002)076<0965:NCALOM>2.0.CO;2.
Bibliography
Goebel, Edwin D. (1968). "Paleozoic Era". In Zeller, D. E. (ed.). The Stratigraphic Succession in Kansas. Kansas Geological Survey Bulletin 189. University of Kansas. p. 12.