Redwall Limestone consists predominantly of light-olive-gray to light-gray, fine- to coarse-grained, thin- to thick-bedded, often cherty, limestone. Its lower part consists of brownish-gray, interbedded with finely crystalline
dolomite and fine- to coarse-grained limestone with layers of white
chert lenses and yellowish-gray and brownish-gray, cliff-forming, thick-bedded, fine-grained dolomite. In ascending order, the Redwall Limestone is divided into the
Whitmore Wash,
Thunder Springs,
Mooney Falls, and
Horseshoe Mesa members. All four
member have their type locality in the Grand Canyon or its tributaries. They are recognized throughout the Grand Canyon area, northern Arizona, and southern Utah. They are all Mississippian in age. The
Whitmore Wash Member is the basal, oldest, member of the Redwall Limestone. It typically forms a high, resistant cliff standing on a narrow bench or series of ledges typical of underlying
strata. This member consists of nearly pure limestone and dolomite, which contains less than 2 percent insoluble
gypsum and
iron oxides. This member is predominately composed of thick-bedded, ranging from and locally thicker, limestone in western Grand Canyon and changes to mostly very thick-bedded , fine-grained dolomite in central and eastern Grand Canyon. The limestones are composed mostly of pelletal, skeletal or
oolitic wackestones and
packstones. In a few places, this member exhibits conspicuous medium-scale
crossbedding. In the Grand Canyon, the Whitmore Wash Member varies in thickness from about in the eastern Grand Canyon to nearly at Iceberg Ridge, beyond the western end of Grand Canyon. The overlying Thunder Springs Member lies conformably on Whitmore Wash Member and its base is easily recognized by the lowest appearance of thin, dark,
chert beds alternating with thin beds of lighter gray limestone or dolomite. The
Thunder Springs Member is the most distinctive member of the Redwall Limestone, because it forms cliffs that exhibit prominent black and light-brown banding. Its light and dark banded appearance is imparted by thin beds of either light gray limestone or light gray dolomite alternating with thin beds of dark reddish brown or dark gray beds or lenses of chert. Most of the limestone is fine to very coarse, thin-bedded,
crinoidal
grainstone or packstone. The carbonate beds vary from being predominately limestone in the western Grand Canyon and to predominately dolomite in the eastern Grand Canyon. The thin chert beds in this member consist of silicified
bryozoan wackestones and lime
mudstones. The Thunder Springs Member gradually increases in thickness from in eastern Grand Canyon to about in the western Grand Canyon. The contact of the overlying Mooney Falls Member with the underlying Thunder Springs Member is disconformable except in the extreme western end of Grand Canyon. Locally, this contact is a low-angle unconformity. This is indicative of a period of emergence, minor tectonic activity, and
erosion between the deposition of the Thunder Springs and Mooney Falls members. , Grand Canyon. The
Mooney Falls Member forms a major part of the high, sheer escarpment for which the Redwall Limestone is named. It consists predominantly of pure limestone, except locally where it is dolomitized. It contains less than 0.5 percent insoluble residue. These limestones consist of oolites, pellets, and a variety of skeletal fragments dominated by crinoid plates. In its upper part near its contact with the overlying Horseshoe Mesa Member, one or two zones containing thin beds or lenses of chert occur. The Mooney Falls Member is normally thick-bedded and looks massive in outcrop. The upper third of this member at several localities in central and eastern Grand Canyon reportedly exhibits large-scale, tabular-planar cross-bedding. The Mooney Falls Member is the thickest member of the Redwall, ranging from about in eastern Grand Canyon to nearly at the western end. The overlying Horseshoe Mesa Member lies conformably on the Mooney Falls Member and its contact can be difficult to define in outcrops. Typically, the boundary is located at the change from vertical, cliff-forming, medium- and coarse-grained, and thick- or massive-bedded limestone to a receding-ledge-forming, fine-grained, and relatively thin-bedded, limestone. The
Horseshoe Mesa Member is the youngest, thinnest, and of the least areal extensive member of the Redwall Limestone. This member is normally composed of thin-bedded, light gray, fine-grained, limestone, typically a mudstone to wackestone that commonly contains encrusting and sediment-binding
algal structures. It contains some chert lenses in its lower part. Also, crossbedding, ripple marks, and oolite beds occur locally. The Horseshoe Mesa Member typically forms weak receding ledges in contrast to the massive cliff that characterizes the Mooney Falls below. Within the Grand Canyon it varies from . It normally thinnest in the eastern Grand Canyon. Because of erosion, this member wedges out south of the Grand Canyon. The Horseshoe Mesa Member is also absent from the Redwall Limestone in most of central Arizona. == Contacts ==