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Guadalupe Mountains National Park - Geology![]() The Guadalupe Mountians are part of one of the finest examples of an ancient marine fossil reef on earth. Geologists visit from around the world to marvel at this extraordinary natural phenomenon, which formed during the Permian Age about 250 million years ago. During this time, a vast tropical ocean covered much of southeastern New Mexico and West Texas. Over millions of years, calcareous sponges, algae, and other lime secreting marine organisms, along with calcium carbonate that precipitated from the water (a source of lime only recently discovered to be primary in this process) built up to form the 400-mile-long, horseshoe-shaped Capitan Reef. |
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Guadalupe Mountains National Park - Geology
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