The Paradox Formation was deposited in the Paradox Basin, a deep basin formed southwest of the Uncompahgre uplift of the
Ancestral Rocky Mountains. The basin experienced rapid
subsidence at the same time that sea levels were periodically rising and falling as a result of
late Paleozoic glaciation. This produced periodic flooding of the basin (as sea levels rose) followed by evaporation (as sea levels fell.) Some 33 cycles of sea level rise and fall are recorded in the Paradox basin, each producing a characteristic sequence of mineral beds. As sea level rose, anhydrite or gypsum were deposited, followed by
dolomite, then black shale at the high stand of the sea. As sea level dropped and the basin was cut off from the open ocean, dolomite was again deposited, then gypsum or anhydrite, then halite (which makes up most of the thickness of the cycle), then
potash. Each cycle is separated by an erosional surface marking the low stand of the sea, and in some cases the potash beds were completely eroded away, so that they are not present in all cycles. This evaporite facies of the formation exists mainly in the subsurface, with only scattered surface exposures of highly deformed beds of the less soluble minerals. over the shelf facies of the Paradox Formation in the San Juan River canyon To the northeast, near the Uncompahgre uplift, the Paradox Formation abruptly transitions to
clastic rock assigned to the undivided Hermosa Group. To the southwest, the basin gradually shallows, and the evaporite beds are replaced by limestone of the carbonate shelf facies of the Paradox Formation. Here each cycle consists of black shale, then carbonate mudstone, then highly fossiliferous silty limestone, then algal mounds, ending with a cap facies of sediments deposited in a very shallow, high-energy environment. This is separated by an erosional surface from the base of the next cycle. The algal mounds are dominated by
Ivanovia, a
green alga whose calcareous fronds form an excellent
reservoir rock for petroleum. The carbonate shelf facies is less than thick but is exposed in the bottom of the
San Juan River canyon. The formation is assigned to the
Hermosa Group, == Salt tectonics ==