The Arroyo Penasco Group consists of marine sedimentary formations, primarily massive
limestone but with some
sandstone. It is divided into the lower
Espiritu Santo Formation and the upper
Tererro Formation. The lowermost part of the Espiritu Santo Formation is designated the
Del Padre Member and is a
transgressive siltstone,
sandstone, and
shale unit, which interfingers with the
carbonate rocks of the upper Espiritu Santo Formation, recording the advance of the sea into the area. A similar sequence is seen in the Tererro Formation, whose base is a collapse
breccia. The group rests everywhere on
Precambrian basement that shows remarkably little
relief, suggesting that the group was deposited on a
peneplain. Its outcrops are spotty and its upper contact shows indications of well-developed
karst topography, often filled in by the iron-rich sediments of the
Log Springs Formation, indicating that it was heavily
eroded before
deposition of the
Sandia Formation. The Espiritu Santo Formation has undergone
dolomitization, dedolomitization, and calcitization of
gypsum and the Macho Member (the lowest part of the Tererro Formation) has experienced dissolution and brecciation. Together with the presence of paleo
silcretes in the Manuelitas Member, the middle part of the Tererro Formation, this suggests a history of at least four episodes of sea level fluctuation during the Mississippian in northern New Mexico.
Diagenetic fabrics can be traced across the region, demonstrating that the group was deposited across an extensive surface of low relief. File:Arroyo Penasco Group Guadelupe Box.jpg|Massive limestone beds of the Arroyo Penasco Group on the rim of Guadelupe Box File:Arroyo Penasco Guadelupe Box close.jpg|Closer view of massive limestone of the Arroyo Penasco Group at Guadelupe Box ==Fossils==