Squaw Bay Limestone

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Squaw Bay Limestone
Stratigraphic range: Givetian-Frasnian
~387.7–372.2 Ma
TypeGeological formation
Unit ofTraverse Group
UnderliesAntrim shale
OverliesThunder Bay Limestone
Thickness10 metres (33 ft)
Lithology
Primarylimestone
Othermudstone
Location
RegionMichigan
CountryUnited States
Type section
Named forSquaw Bay (Michigan)

Squaw Bay Limestone (referred to as the Traverse Formation in older literature) is a geologic formation in Michigan. It is a part of the Traverse Group, which preserves fossils dating to the Middle to Late Devonian. It is the uppermost formation in the group, overlying the Thunder Bay Limestone and underlying the Antrim shale. It preserves a marine environment in the last section of the area's transition from an oxygen-rich shallow carbonate platform to an oxygen-poor deep sea floor. Though most well known for the diversity of conodonts, the formation also contains fossils from other groups such as cephalopods and brachiopods.

The Squaw Bay Limestone was originally named in 1943 by Warthin and Cooper. Being based on the type locality located in the Squaw Bay, renamed the Birdsong Bay in 2022, of Lake Heron. The original exposure was 1 m thick and was made up of brown limestone. This, however, wasn't the first time beds of the formation had been published on. In 1938, Miller had described a section now referred to as the Koenenites beds as an "unnamed limestone at the base of the Antrim Formation.". Most of the limestone, however, is underwater with only the upper layers of the formation being accessible with the water levels are lower. The major collection of about 9 kg of limestone was done by Cooper in the early summer of 1953 during a period of low water. [1] Though not the current consensus, the formation was at one point thought to represent a much more shallow environment, specifically a coastal swamp.[2]

Description

The Squaw Bay Limestone is the uppermost formation of the Traverse Group, overlying the Thunder Bay Limestone and underlying the Antrim Shale. The contact between Squaw Bay and Thunder Bay is located in a lowland swamp while its contact with the Antrim Shale is located at the Paxton Quarry in Alpina, Michigan. The formation as a whole is relatively thin, having an average thickness of 3 m but reaching 10 m thick in some places.[3] Even with this being the case, the Squaw Bay Limestone is made up of 3 distinct beds being the Zoophycos bed, Molluscan bed, and the Calcareous mudstone bed. [4]

Zoophycos Bed

The Zoophycos Bed is the lowermost section of the formation, being made up of olive to brownish-gray dolomitic limestone containing pyrite or limonite depending on the section. The bed as a whole is around 0.7 m thick with only the upper 0.5 m being exposed as a pavement. The bed contains a large amount of Zoophycos along with a small amount of vertical Skolithos on the top surface.[4]

Molluscan Bed

The Molluscan Beds represent the small amount of limestone layers present at the upper section of the formation, being present on the edges of the beach and under the water of the bay. The limestone itself is brown and irregular bedding is present. As the name suggests, the Molluscan bed preserves a large amount of mollusks, mostly being made up of a low-diversity assemblage of cephalopods. There is almost no sessile-benthic fauna preserved at the bed, excluding a single agglutinated tube potentially coming from some sort of annelid. At the type locality of the formation, there is also a large diversity of conodonts preserved.[4]

Calcareous Mudstone Bed

The Calcareous Mudstone Bed is the uppermost bed of the formation, only being present at the Paxton Quarry near the contact with the Antrim Shale. It is at least 1.5 m thick, mostly being made up of green calcareous mudstone. A large amount of conodonts are present in the argillaceous limestone which is present in the forms of interbedding and thin lenses. This bed is the only section of the formation that dates to the Late Devonian.[4]

Paleobiota

Paleoenvironment

References

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