“…From sample ages and textural characteristics, we infer the original stratigraphic context Gypsum, shale, and limestone alike contain abundant characteristics of peritidal to supratidal depositional conditions, including chicken-wire structure, small oscillation ripples, desiccation polygons, birds-eye structure, peloids, thin cryptobiotic lamination, and locally abundant untransported oyster accumulations (Kroeger and Stinnesbeck, 2003;Cross, 2012). Ammonite and bivalve fossils, including the gryphaeid oyster Nanogyra virgula, recovered from carbonate strata in the upper ~550 m of the Minas Viejas Formation indicate a late Oxfordian-early Kimmeridgian age for the carbonates (Cross, 2012;Zell et al, 2015). The Minas Viejas section in the Sierra Madre Oriental is gradationally overlain by sandy limestone that has long been considered as pertaining to the Zuloaga Limestone (e.g., Kroeger and Stinnesbeck, 2003), which is late Oxfordian in exposures to the west where salt is absent (Imlay, 1943).…”