Helderberg Group (geology)

Geologic Group found in the Appalachian Basin From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Helderberg Group is a geologic group that outcrops in the States of New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, New Jersey, and West Virginia. It also is present subsurface in Ohio and the Canadian provinces of Ontario and Nova Scotia.[1] It preserves fossils dating back to the Early Devonian and Late Silurian period. The name was coined by T.A. Conrad (1839) in the New York State Geological Survey Annual Report, named for the Helderberg Escarpment or Helderberg Mountains.[2]

TypeGroup
Sub-units
Port Ewen Shale
Minisink Limestone
New Scotland Formation
Maskenozha Member
Flatbrookville Member
Coeymans Formation
Kalkberg / Stormsville Members
Shawnee / Revanna Members
Depue Limestone Member
Peters Valley Member
Manlius Limestone
Thacher Member
Quick facts Type, Sub-units ...
Helderberg Group
Stratigraphic range: Lochkovian-Emsian
~419–393 Ma
TypeGroup
Sub-units
Port Ewen Shale
Minisink Limestone
New Scotland Formation
Maskenozha Member
Flatbrookville Member
Coeymans Formation
Kalkberg / Stormsville Members
Shawnee / Revanna Members
Depue Limestone Member
Peters Valley Member
Manlius Limestone
Thacher Member
Underlies
Onondaga Limestone
Oriskany Formation
Overlies
Lithology
PrimaryLimestone
OtherDolomite, Chert
Location
RegionNew York, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Maryland, Ohio
CountryUnited States
Type section
Named forHelderberg Escarpment
Named byConrad, T.A. 1839
Close

The upper portion of the Helderberg, or the Kalkberg Formation is host to the Bald Hill ash bed, dated to 417.6 million years ago.[3]

The Helderberg is composed chiefly of limestone and dolomite.[4]

In Maryland and southern Pennsylvania, the Helderberg is divided into three formations. These are the New Creek Limestone, the Corriganville Limestone, and the Mandata Shale. The total thickness is about 60 feet (18 m). The formations weather easily and are poorly exposed except in cuts and quarries.[5]

Stratigraphy

Manlius Limestone

The Manlius Limestone was first noted by Vanuxem (1840, p. 372) as a "waterlime" (hydraulic limestone) near Manlius, New York.[6] The Manlius is composed of limestone, grainstone, calcareous mudstone and bindstone. The Manlius is 419 - 411 Ma.[7]

The Thacher Member of the Manlius extends along eastern New York and down into parts of northern New Jersey. It is characterised as a "ribbon rock", meaning it contains very thin layers of alternating limestone and argillaceous rock. The color of the Thacher is dark blueish-black. The limestone is fine- to medium-grained. It averages 51 feet (16 m) thick. It makes up the upper part of the Manlius in New York State and makes up the entirety of the Manlius in northeastern New Jersey. Moving southwest, it become more argillaceous and arenaceous as it grades into Depue Limestone.[citation needed]

The Thacher contains fossils of stromatoporoids, crinoids, rugose corals, tabulate corals, tranchiopods, tentaculitids, and ostracodes.

References

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