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CHAPTER 1 STRATIGRAPHY AND FACIES OF THE MIDDLE AND UPPER HAMILTON GROUP (MIDDLE DEVONIAN; GIVETIAN) IN NEW YORK STATE AND ADJACENT AREAS.

Authors :
Brett, Carlton E.
Baird, Gordon C.
Zambito IV, James J.
Bartholomew, Alexander J.
Source :
Bulletins of American Paleontology. Jul2023, Issue 405/406, p1-195. 195p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The Middle Devonian (lower–middle Givetian) Hamilton Group of New York State is an iconic unit in North America, which has contributed many key concepts in stratigraphy, sedimentary geology, paleoecology, and evolution. This interval comprises a 100- to 1200-m-thick clastic wedge, shed westward from the Acadian Mountains, with thin but persistent carbonates. Despite the rich and diverse invertebrate fauna that consists of more than 300 species of corals, bryozoans, brachiopods, mollusks, echinoderms, and trilobites, the age of the Hamilton Group is rather poorly constrained in terms of chronostratigraphy owing to the rarity of biostratigraphically useful conodonts and goniatites. The upper part of the Hamilton Group that is the focus of this paper apparently belongs to the Polygnathus timorensis to middle Polygnathus ansatus Conodont chronozones. The middle to upper Hamilton Group in New York State comprises three formations—the Skaneateles, Ludlowville, and Moscow—each defined as an interval delimited with a sharply based fossiliferous limestone-calcareous siltstone; these formations are interpreted as containing condensed transgressive deposits overlain by thicker highstand to falling-stage shales, mudstones/siltstones, and sandstones. The eastern equivalents of these formations are dominated by fine-grained sandstones and siltstones and include two formations: the Panther Mountain Formation, equivalent to the Skaneateles and Ludlowville formations combined, and the Cooperstown Formation, equivalent to the Moscow Formation. In the present paper, we review, revise and update a hierarchical framework of lithostratigraphic subdivisions of these formations, including 24 members (four new), 50 submembers (more than half newly proposed or redefined; 14 informal at this time), and more than 80 named beds, both formal and informal. This refined lithostratigraphy provides an excellent framework for studying high-resolution sequence stratigraphy. As defined herein, members and most submembers represent high-frequency depositional sequences with basal shell-rich carbonates and abrupt flooding surfaces that mark the bases of highstand deposits. Not only are most of the members and submembers traceable across western and central New York, but also to a lesser extent into adjacent regions that include southern Ontario, Ohio, the Michigan Basin, and northeastern Pennsylvania. Nevertheless, much work on correlation remains to be done in eastern New York and central Pennsylvania, where local progradation of siliciclastics and expansion of successions obscures many of the finer scale features. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00075779
Issue :
405/406
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Bulletins of American Paleontology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
169774346
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.32857/bap.2023.405.01