Mississippian Period
(310-350 million years ago)
The sea continued to cover most of Colorado after the end of the Devonian Period, well into Mississippian time. Mississippian rocks are characteristically thick, massive gray limestones collectively called the Leadville Limestone. This unit is well known as the host rock for many Colorado ore deposits, notably those around the town of Leadville.
During Mississippian time the western sea, warm and rich in organisms, covered much of North America. [Brachiopods] and corals flourished, as did many other forms of life. The seas during part of this time extended completely across Colorado to merge with seas that covered the midwestern part of the United States.
Over all this vast area, as well as southwest into Arizona, the gray, massive, fossiliferous Mississippian limestone is remarkably uniform and easily recognized, although it is called by different names in different areas.
Late in Mississippian time, the Colorado area rose slightly and the sea in which the Leadville Limestone was deposited receded. An interval of erosion followed. The surface of the limestone was dissolved and pitted, tunnels and caves formed where running water etched deep into the rock, and a reddish soil formed on the surface and in the hollows. This portion of the limestone, which in some places also contains pebbles of chert, is named the Molas Formation. Part of the Molas may be Pennsylvanian in age.
Mississippian [fossils] from western Colorado show that seas covered much of the state about 330 million years ago.
Pennsylvanian Period
(270-310 million years ago)
As the Pennsylvanian Period began, the Colorado area continued to rise. Earliest deposits of this age are fine-grained black shales and sands—the Glen Eyrie Formation along the southern Front Range and the Belden Formation in west central Colorado. Then, through millions of years, mountain-building took place. Some areas rose more than others, so that formerly flat-lying marine sediments were bent and broken, and a series of high mountain ridges and deep basins were formed. Geologists sometimes call these the Ancestral Rocky Mountains.
Although the pattern of the mountains changed repeatedly, the Ancestral Rockies consisted principally of two large ranges. One range roughly paralleled the present Front Range, but lay thirty to fifty miles further west. The other extended from the San Luis Valley northwest toward Colorado National Monument, including the area around the Black Canyon of the Gunnison and the present Uncompahgre [Plateau]. Coarse sediments washed off both sides of both ranges, and accumulated as [alluvial fans] and valley fill along the mountain margins. These exist today as the Fountain Formation of the eastern Front Range, the Minturn Formation between the ancient uplifts, and the Hermosa Formation west of the western uplift.