The Toroweap Formation exhibits well-defined lateral and vertical changes in
facies over its
outcrop. In the western extent of its outcrop in the Grand Canyon region and adjacent parts of Utah and Nevada, the Toroweap Formation is readily subdivided, in ascending order, into the Seligman, Brady Canyon, and Woods Ranch members. Two of these members (Seligman and Woods Ranch members ) consist of red beds and evaporites (gypsum) and are separated by a
fossiliferous limestone member (Brady Canyon Member). The red beds of the Seligman and Woods Ranch members are largely of soft, friable
sediments, which rapidly weather into slopes, The Brady Canyon Member is a resistant limestone which characteristically stands up as a prominent cliff between the slopes of the Seligman and Woods Ranch members. Further eastward, the Brady Canyon Member disappears, and the two red bed members merged into an undivided Toroweap Formation. Further east, the red beds grade laterally into
cross-bedded sandstones of the Sand Cave Member of the
Coconino Sandstone. The
Seligman Member of the Toroweap formation largely consists of fine-grained, red and yellow sandstone. It typically exhibits flat or irregular
bedding. Its maximum observed thickness is about and in most places is no thicker than . At its upper contact, the Seligman Member grades upwards through a transitional zone of alternating beds of sandstone and limestone into the fossiliferous limestone of the Brady Canyon Member. In Grand Wash Canyon on
Lake Mead, the sandstones of the Seligman Member contain a very conspicuous layer of
breccia, interpreted to be an
intraformational conglomerate, only a few feet above the top of the Coconino Sandstone. The basal layer of the Seligman Member is a red sandstone or siltstone composed of Coconino-like quartz grains scattered through finer-grained sediment. The Seligman Member interfingers with and lies
conformably on the underlying Coconino Sandstone. Overlying the Seligman Member is the
Brady Canyon Member. It consists of cliff-forming limestone and
dolomite. Laterally, the Brady Canyon Member is divisible into two facies grading from one through a third transitional facies into the other using differences in
lithology and
fossil content. The first facies is exposed in an area from the extreme western edge of its outcrop belt east to Toroweap Valley and southeast almost to
Seligman, Arizona. This facies consists of a marine limestone that is mostly coarsely crystalline and
cherty in some beds. This facies contains a
fauna dominated by
brachiopods and
echinoids. The second facies of the Brady Canyon Member is exposed in outcrops eastward past Seligman, Arizona to where it merges and terminates within the enclosing red beds. In consist of fine-grained, mostly
sand-,
silt-, and
clay-free limestone. It contains a fauna composed almost exclusively of abundant, but poorly preserved,
pelecypods and
gastropods. It apparently accumulated nearer the
coastline and likely under
brackish-water conditions. The transition zone between the two facies consists of an unfossiliferous, thin-bedded ( thick), uniform-textured dolomite. This limestone weathers into smooth, small, angular cobbles. In western Grand Canyon region, it is thickest, as much as to thick. The Brady Canyon Member thins uniformly to the east where it is of approximately thick in the
type section in Toroweap Valley and disappears near
Marble Canyon as it merges with the overlying Woods Ranch Member. Beds of the third (dolomite) facies recur between overlying red beds of the Woods Ranch Member and the other facies of the Brady Canyon Member as part of a gradational contact between these members. Below
Desert View Point in Grand Canyon, the Brady Canyon Member is about thick and is entirely missing in outcrops along the Little Colorado Canyon and in Sycamore Canyon. The red beds of the
Woods Ranch Member consist of interbedded layers of gypsum, thin-bedded dolomite, and sandstone. Eastward of Havasu Canyon this member lack gypsum and dolomite and contains beds of white, cross-bedded sandstone. Breccias or intraformational conglomerates occur in many places throughout the entire outcrop of the Woods Ranch Member. Associated with these breccias in some places are lacustrine
travertines. A prominent feature found throughout the entire outcrop of the Woods Ranch Member is a fossil-bearing limestone, It occurs over a remarkably wide area without appreciable variation with a thickness of only . The fossils found everywhere in with this marker bed consist only of a pelecypod of the
genus Schizodus. This member forms distinctive slopes and attains a maximum thickness of about . ==Fossils==