Field mapping in the southern part of the Pequop Mountains has shown the presence of a major structural high which has profoundly affected the stratigraphy of Pennsylvanian and Lower Permian beds; lesser effects of this high persisted into the later Permian. Within the Park City Group (Permian), the Plymton Formation, overlying the Kaibab Limestone, is divided informally into five parts. The uppermost Plympton has yielded silicified fossils. The faunule studied is characterized by the scaphopod Plagioglypta and by bellerophontacean and neritacean gastropods, suggestive of a middle Permian age. Specimens are worn, and several lines of evidence suggest that this is a high-energy beach deposit associated with a residual high. The interpretation supplements the field evidence of a hiatus between the Plympton and the overlying Gerster Formation. Other occurrences of elements of the faunule in the equivalent Phosphoria rock complex are noted, but only a few were probably deposited in a high-energy beach environment. A new species of Naticopsis that has the color pattern preserved is named and described.