The name was applied by Meek, F.B. and Hayden, F.V. in 1862 to the gray marine shales, often chalky in the middle layers, lying above the terrestrial Dakota Sandstone and usually below the massive limestones at the base of the Niobrara Chalk. The name was taken from the type outcrop at Fort Benton, today a small city in Montana on the Upper Missouri River.[2]
Today, the Benton classification is obsolete in some regions, having been replaced by the ascending sequence Graneros Shale/Belle Fourche Shale, Greenhorn Limestone, and Carlile Shale.[3][4] However, many old publications used the name. And the use of the Benton Group name continues in the Front Range where the Graneros Shale, Greenhorn Limestone, Carlile Shale, and Codell Sandstone may be recognized as member units.[5][6]
In the lower Missouri River, west of Yankton, South Dakota, the distinction between the Benton and the Niobrara is very clear. This is near Meek and Hayden's type location for the Niobrara, the Niobrara River. On the shores of Lewis and Clark Lake between Yankton and the Niobrara River, high bluffs of near white Fort Hays Limestone are perched above the top of the gray shales that Meek and Hayden named "Fort Benton". However, at their Fort Benton type location for the Benton Group, the Fort Hays Limestone layer is hardly distinct from the Benton Shale and is identifiable only by its major change in fossil species.
The Mancos Shale of the Colorado Plateau correlates with the Colorado Shale, and the Tokay Tongue of the lower Mancos is the synonym for the Benton Shale.[7]
Bentonite
There are many thin beds of volcanic ash in the unit that have devitrified into mostly montmorillonite. Taking its name from the formation, this material is called bentonite. Iron sulfide in the bentonite seams converts to rust when exposed to air resulting in orange lines across exposures of Benton shale and chalk.
^Noblett, J.B.; Cohen, A.S.; Leonard, E.M.; Loeffler, B.M.; Gevirtzman, D.A. (1987). "The Garden of the Gods and basal Phanerozoic nonconformity in and near Colorado Springs, Colorado.". In Beus, S.S. (ed.). Geological Society of America Centennial Field Guide for the Rocky Mountain Section: Boulder, Colorado. Boulder, Colorado, Geological Society of America. p. 335-338. ISBN0-8137-5402-X. (Benton Group is in current use in this location.)
^Raynolds, R.G. (2020). "MS-54 Cretaceous Stratigraphy of Colorado". Stratigraphic, Variable Scale. Map Series. Denver, CO: Colorado Geological Survey and the Denver Museum of Nature & Science. p. sheet 1.
^Spencer G. Lucas; W. John Nelson; Karl Krainer; Scott D. Elrick (Spring 2019). "The Cretaceous System in central Sierra County, New Mexico"(PDF). New Mexico Geology. 41 (1): 10. Retrieved 2022-06-12. Tokay Tongue, however, is simply a synonym of the unit that Meek and Hayden (1861) long ago named the "Fort Benton group" (more commonly called Benton Group or Benton Shale ... and that [name, Benton,] has long been abandoned in favor of a more detailed lithostratigraphic terminology
^F. V. Hayden, United States Geologist (1871). "IX. Sketch of the geological formations along the route of the Union Pacific Railway, Eastern Division". Final Reports of the United States Geological Survey of Nebraska and Portions of the Adjacent Territories. House Documents, otherwise Publ. as Executive Documents United States. Congress. House. Government Printing Office. pp. 66–69. Retrieved 2018-10-04. At Hays City the massive rocky layers of No. 3 are sawed into blocks, and employed in the construction of buildings. ... About eight miles west of Hays City there are about 60 feet exposed, of the dark clays of No. 2, of the Fort Benton Group.
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