Publications in Wilbarger

Title Publication Year Abstract Author Series Publisher
Geologic Atlas of Texas, Wichita Falls-Lawton sheet Geologic Atlas of Texas, Wichita Falls-Lawton sheet 1987

Geologic map that depicts the surface geology of Hardeman, Wilbarger, Wichita, Clay, Knox, Baylor, Archer, Haskell, Throckmorton, Young, and Foard Counties and part of Jack County, Texas. The 20-page booklet indicates geologic formations, abbreviations, and ages.

Barnes, V.E., Hentz, T.F., Brown, L.F., Jr., Cleaves, A.W., Kier, R.S., McGowen, J.H., Parrish, W.C., Ramsey, J.W. Geologic Atlas of Texas Bureau of Economic Geology
The Mississippian and Pennsylvanian (Carboniferous) Systems in the United States -- Texas The Mississippian and Pennsylvanian (Carboniferous) Systems in the United States -- Texas 1980 Kier, R.S., Brown, L.F., Jr., McBride, E.F. Geological Circular Bureau of Economic Geology
Geologic map of the Seymour aquifer deposits, Vernon, Texas 30x60 minute quadrangle, Texas Geologic map of the Seymour aquifer deposits, Vernon, Texas 30x60 minute quadrangle, Texas 2003 Collins, E.W. Open-File Map Bureau of Economic Geology
Depositional systems in Canyon Group (Pennsylvanian System), north-central Texas Depositional systems in Canyon Group (Pennsylvanian System), north-central Texas 1975

The Canyon Group (Missourian Series) is a sequence of westward-dipping, genetically related carbonate and terrigenous clastic facies that crop out in a northeast-southwest belt across North-Central Texas.

Erxleben, A.W. Report of Investigations Bureau of Economic Geology
Lithostratigraphy and paleoenvironments of Upper Paleozoic continental red beds, north-central Texas:  Bowie (new) and Wichita (revised) Groups Lithostratigraphy and paleoenvironments of Upper Paleozoic continental red beds, north-central Texas: Bowie (new) and Wichita (revised) Groups 1988

Approximately 2,200 ft (670 m) of principally continental and paralic rocks of late Virgilian, Wolfcampian, and early Leonardian age (late Pennsylvanian and early Permian) are exposed in an area of about 4,950 mi2 (12,800 km2) between the Brazos and Red Rivers in North-Central Texas.

Hentz, T.F. Report of Investigations Bureau of Economic Geology
Regional depositional systems tracts, paleogeography, and sequence stratigraphy, Upper Pennsylvanian and Lower Permian strata, north- and west-central Texas Regional depositional systems tracts, paleogeography, and sequence stratigraphy, Upper Pennsylvanian and Lower Permian strata, north- and west-central Texas 1990

Sixteen depositional sequences, commonly called cyclothems, each composed mostly of limestone(retrogradational/transgressive) and siliciclastic (progradational/regressive) subsequences, or systems tracts, record the paleogeography during Late Pennsylvanian (Virgilian Epoch) and Early Permian (Wol

Brown, L.F., Jr., Solis-Iriarte, R.F., Johns, D.A. Report of Investigations Bureau of Economic Geology
Regional and Local Variability in Lowstand Valley Fill and Deltaic Deposits in the Tannehill Sandstone (Cisco Group), Eastern Shelf of the Permian Basin Regional and Local Variability in Lowstand Valley Fill and Deltaic Deposits in the Tannehill Sandstone (Cisco Group), Eastern Shelf of the Permian Basin 2024

Lowstand valley fill and shelf-edge deltaic deposits in the Tannehill sandstone (Wolfcampian Cisco Group) in the Eastern Shelf of the Permian Basin are major targets for oil and gas exploration.

Ambrose, W.A., Hentz, T.F., Carr, D.L. Report of Investigations Bureau of Economic Geology
Stratigraphic and structural studies in north central Texas 1929 Cheney, M.G. UT Bulletin
Regional stratigraphic cross sections, Upper Pennsylvanian and Lower Permian strata (Virgilian and Wolfcampian Series), north-central Texas 1987

This cross section set comprises 14 dip (E-W) sections and 9 strike (N-S) stratigraphic cross sections (with text), correlating upper Pennsylvanian (Virgilian) and lower Permian (Wolfcampian) strata throughout the subsurface in all or parts of 28 counties of North-Central Texas.

Brown, L.F., Jr., Solis-Iriarte, R.F., Johns, D.A. Cross Sections