ASTRONOMICALLY FORCED CYCLICITY IN THE UPPER ORDOVICIAN UTICA SHALE, TACONIC FORELAND BASIN, MOHAWK VALLEY REGION, NY, USA

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Davide Bana ◽  
◽  
Charles E. Mitchell
2004 ◽  
Vol 41 (12) ◽  
pp. 1473-1490 ◽  
Author(s):  
F -A Comeau ◽  
D Kirkwood ◽  
M Malo ◽  
E Asselin ◽  
R Bertrand

In the Quebec Appalachians, disruption, imbrication, and thrusting of the Taconian foreland basin sequence are responsible for the development of chaotic units within the turbiditic sequence of the Caradocian Sainte-Rosalie Group, the main lithologic assemblage of the parautochthonous zone. These chaotic units have been termed olistostromes or tectonosomes on the basis of field criteria and following Pini's (1999) classification. Olistostromal units containing blocks of the middle mudstone (Utica Shale) and upper turbidite units (Ste-Rosalie Group) of the foreland basin and spanning the Caradocian N. gracilis, C. americanus, O. ruedemanni, and C. spiniferus graptolite zones were deposited and incorporated into the Sainte-Rosalie Group. Disruption of more competent beds of the flyschic sequence and fault stacking and slicing of older rock units occurred along major thrust faults and now form structurally aligned corridors or tectonosomes. Graptolites and new chitinozoan data from both olistostromes and tectonosomes indicate older ages (early Late Ordovician) than the flysch units of Sainte-Rosalie Group (mid Late Ordovocian). Lithological, stratigraphic, and structural criteria indicate that tectonosome slices are imbricated foreland basin rocks that are correlative to the Black River, Trenton, Utica, Sainte-Rosalie, and Lorraine groups of the Laurentian platform. Thermal maturation data indicates that disruption of the autochthonous sequence, and folding and thrusting of the entire foreland basin sequence, must have occurred shortly after their deposition. Contrary to what had been suggested, blocks in the olistostromes and tectonosomes were not derived from the allochthonous Chaudière thrust sheet, even though it presently marks the southern contact with the parautochthonous zone. Imbrication of the foreland basin sequence must have occurred before emplacement of the Chaudière thrust sheet.


1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 110-110
Author(s):  
Daniel Goldman

The Middle to Upper Ordovician graptolite taxon Orthograptus quadrimucronatus currently comprises 11 sub-species and has several closely related species. Many of these subspecies are poorly defined, having been established on the basis of stratigraphic and geographic occurrence and not morphological differences. A detailed morphometric analysis of this group indicates that all 11 subspecies of O. quadrimucronatus and the morphologically similar British species, O. pageanus, can be placed within three distinct lineages. Members of the O. pageanus lineage are characterized by long apertural spines on the first two thecae, a broad proximal end, and a wide less densely thecate rhabdosome. Specimens belonging to the O. quadrimucronatus spinigerus lineage have narrow proximal ends, rapidly widening rhabdosomes, and elongated apertural spines on the 8th to 12th thecal pairs. The O. quadrimucronatus quadrimucronatus lineage is composed of specimens with no unusual spines and rather parallel sided rhabdosomes.Orthograptus pageanus first appears in the lower Corynoides americanus Zone and is probably derived from the O. calcaratus species group. O. pageanus retains the large basal spines, robust rhabdosomes, and long thick nema found in O. calcaratus. The thecae of O. pageanus are, however, highly derived with respect to O. calcaratus whose thecae retain the form of their hustedograptid ancestry. O. pageanus has everted thecal apertures and paired apertural spines as opposed to the introverted thecal apertures and apertural horns present in O. calcaratus. O. quadrimucronatus quadrimucronatus appears at approximately the same time as O. pageanus while O. q. spinigerus appears slightly later in Australia and Great Britain and several graptolite zones later in eastern North America. The first appearance of all three lineages in the classic graptolite-bearing rocks (Utica Shale) of the northern Appalachian basin represents immigration and not speciation. Members of the O. pageanus lineage grow rapidly in size through the C. americanus Zone and become extinct at or just above the top of the zone. The O. q. quadrimucronatus lineage shows no single trend through time, getting larger and smaller, seemingly in response to changing water chemistry and temperature. Poor preservation of collections of O. q. spinigerus make within lineage changes over time impossible to evaluate.Specimens of these three lineages were examined across an interval of time representing four graptolite zones (C. americanus to G. pygmaeus zones) in the Middle and Upper Ordovician rocks of Australia, Great Britain and eastern North America. This interval is generally regarded as having a duration of approximately four million years. Across this interval each of these lineages appears to be a stable entity in space and time. Although there are changes in size among members of a lineage during its existence, there are no basic changes in form. Thus, the anagenetic change in these organisms does not appear to produce any new species or even sub-species. New taxa appear with no evidence of ancestral intermediates, and remain basically the same throughout their duration. This pattern is consistent with punctuated equilibrium, although anagenetic size change is also observed.


1969 ◽  
Vol 35 ◽  
pp. 39-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Niels H. Schovsbo ◽  
Arne T. Nielsen ◽  
Mikael Erlström

A complete log-stratigraphical breakdown of the Middle Ordovician to lower Silurian shale-dominated succession is presented for the Bornholm–Skåne–Kattegat area in southernmost Scandinavia. A wireline log zonation developed for the onshore Bornholm Palaeozoic shales is extended to include the offshore Palaeozoic shales in the adjacent Rønne Graben. A complete log zonation scheme for the Cyrtograptus shale (late Llandovery–Wenlock) and the lower part of the Colonus shale (Ludlow) is presented including correlation within the Bornholm–Skåne–Kattegat area. The Cyrtograptus shale in the Bornholm area is estimated to be 400 m thick and marks the shift to a rapidly subsiding foreland basin, heralding the Caledonian Orogeny.


2018 ◽  
Vol 92 ◽  
pp. 794-808 ◽  
Author(s):  
Omid H. Ardakani ◽  
Hamed Sanei ◽  
Amin Ghanizadeh ◽  
Denis Lavoie ◽  
Zhuoheng Chen ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 156 (1) ◽  
pp. 83-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
WEIHUA YAO ◽  
ZHENG-XIANG LI

AbstractWe report three Palaeozoic sedimentary successions in northeastern South China that display markedly different tectonostratigraphic characteristics: the Jiangshan section exhibits an angular unconformity between the Upper Ordovician and Carboniferous stratra; the Shuangming section exhibits a disconformity between the lower Silurian and Upper Devonian strata; and the Xinqiao section exhibits a disconformity between the upper Silurian and Upper Devonian strata. The Shuangming and Xinqiao sections are interpreted to represent the remnant Nanhua foreland basin, whereas the Jiangshan section is in the fold-and-thrust zone of the Wuyi-Yunkai orogen. The Lizhu-Changshan thrust fault in between is interpreted to be the frontal thrust and the boundary of the orogen. Detrital provenance analysis of the Ordovician–Devonian sandstones from the Shuangming and Xinqiao sections shows that the Ordovician–Silurian, mid- to late-orogenic sandstones contain dominantly 860–780 Ma zircon populations and subordinate 2.5 Ga, 1.89–1.78 Ga, 980–950 Ma, 630–540 Ma and 430 Ma populations, indicating nearby sources including the early Neoproterozoic Sibao orogen, inverted Neoproterozoic rift basins and related plutons, recycled Ediacaran–Cambrian strata and, increasing with time, exposed Cathaysia basement and minor syn- to late-orogenic plutonic intrusions. The Devonian post-orogenic sandstones exhibit a dominant 440 Ma population with minor 2.5 Ga, 1.89–1.78 Ga, 860–780 Ma and 630–540 Ma populations, suggesting a dominant contribution from now widely exposed, mid- to late-orogenic plutonic intrusions (with or without contributions from rare volcanism of similar ages) in a residual topographic high SE of the Lizhu-Changshan fault. This residual topographic high of the Wuyi-Yunkai orogen had completely perished by early Carboniferous time, c. 60Myr after the end of the orogenic event.


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