Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Stratigraphy of the Pennsylvanian and Permian Systems of the Central Appalachians

View through CrossRef
The rocks of the Pennsylvanian and Permian Systems of the central Appalachians are a series of shales and fine- to coarse-grained sandstones, locally conglomeratic, arranged in repetitious sequences with thinner coals, clays, lacustrine and marine limestones, chert, and ironstone. Isopachous and facies maps of arbitrarily selected thick units suggest two bodies of rocks, each with distinct orientations and distributions of swamp (organic) and lacustrine-marine (chemical) environments with respect to alluvial (deltaic) deposits. The earlier body, including the Pocahontas, New River, Kanawha, and Charleston, is a wedge of fine- to coarse-grained clastic rocks derived principally from older rocks of the Appalachians to the southeast. The sediments were deposited in a northeast-southwest–trending rapidly subsiding basin in western Virginia, southern West Virginia, and southeastern Kentucky. The coal-bearing facies thins rapidly to the northwest into massive marine (early) and deltaic (later) sandstones. The later body of rocks is divided into two groups distributed in a northerly deepening restricted basin of deposition. The lower group includes the Pottsville, Allegheny, and lower Conemaugh to the top of the Saltsburg Sandstone. Coarse- to fine-grained clastic sediments encroached on swamp, lacustrine, and marine environments in northeastern Kentucky, northern West Virginia, Maryland, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. The upper group includes the upper Conemaugh, Monongahela, and Dunkard, in ascending order. Fine (red)- to medium-grained clastic sediments of southwestern West Virginia and adjacent areas of Ohio and Kentucky encroached on swamp and lacustrine environments of northern West Virginia and contiguous areas of Maryland, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.
Title: Stratigraphy of the Pennsylvanian and Permian Systems of the Central Appalachians
Description:
The rocks of the Pennsylvanian and Permian Systems of the central Appalachians are a series of shales and fine- to coarse-grained sandstones, locally conglomeratic, arranged in repetitious sequences with thinner coals, clays, lacustrine and marine limestones, chert, and ironstone.
Isopachous and facies maps of arbitrarily selected thick units suggest two bodies of rocks, each with distinct orientations and distributions of swamp (organic) and lacustrine-marine (chemical) environments with respect to alluvial (deltaic) deposits.
The earlier body, including the Pocahontas, New River, Kanawha, and Charleston, is a wedge of fine- to coarse-grained clastic rocks derived principally from older rocks of the Appalachians to the southeast.
The sediments were deposited in a northeast-southwest–trending rapidly subsiding basin in western Virginia, southern West Virginia, and southeastern Kentucky.
The coal-bearing facies thins rapidly to the northwest into massive marine (early) and deltaic (later) sandstones.
The later body of rocks is divided into two groups distributed in a northerly deepening restricted basin of deposition.
The lower group includes the Pottsville, Allegheny, and lower Conemaugh to the top of the Saltsburg Sandstone.
Coarse- to fine-grained clastic sediments encroached on swamp, lacustrine, and marine environments in northeastern Kentucky, northern West Virginia, Maryland, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.
The upper group includes the upper Conemaugh, Monongahela, and Dunkard, in ascending order.
Fine (red)- to medium-grained clastic sediments of southwestern West Virginia and adjacent areas of Ohio and Kentucky encroached on swamp and lacustrine environments of northern West Virginia and contiguous areas of Maryland, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.

Related Results

Pennsylvanian Rocks of Southwestern New Mexico and Southeastern Arizona
Pennsylvanian Rocks of Southwestern New Mexico and Southeastern Arizona
Abstract Pennsylvanian strata in southwestern New Mexico and southeastern Arizona range from Morrowan? to Virgilian in age, are disconformable to angularly unconform...
Pennsylvanian Rocks of New England
Pennsylvanian Rocks of New England
Abstract Several basins of probable Pennsylvanian rocks are downfolded or downfaulted into the older rocks of New England. The largest of these, and definitely of Pe...
Carboniferous of the Eastern Interior Basin
Carboniferous of the Eastern Interior Basin
The Carboniferous rocks of the Eastern Interior basin reach a maximum thickness of 5,700 ft., and the Mississippian and Pennsylvanian subdivisions are separated by a major widespre...
Late Mississippian and Pennsylvanian Sediments of Ouachita Facies, Oklahoma, Texas, and Arkansas
Late Mississippian and Pennsylvanian Sediments of Ouachita Facies, Oklahoma, Texas, and Arkansas
Abstract Sedimentary rocks of Ouachita facies are here defined as rocks lithologically similar and strati-graphically equivalent to sedimentary and low-grade meta-se...
Geology, Gravity, and Magnetics at Juncture of Southern and Central Appalachians, New Castle Area, Craig County, Virginia
Geology, Gravity, and Magnetics at Juncture of Southern and Central Appalachians, New Castle Area, Craig County, Virginia
ABSTRACT A combined geologic-geophysical survey was carried out in the New Castle area, Craig County, Virginia, in the Valley and Ridge province at the junction o...
Mercury (Hg) anomalies and carbon isotope excursions as a stratigraphic marker for the Permian – Triassic mass extinction
Mercury (Hg) anomalies and carbon isotope excursions as a stratigraphic marker for the Permian – Triassic mass extinction
Mercury concentration anomalies in sedimentary successions are widely considered as proxies for volcanism and together with negative carbon isotope (δ13C) excursions, are ...
Platycrinites and associated crinoids from Pennsylvanian rocks of the Sacramento Mountains, New Mexico
Platycrinites and associated crinoids from Pennsylvanian rocks of the Sacramento Mountains, New Mexico
Platycrinites and other genera of the crinoid family Platycrinitidae are abundant in the early Carboniferous and known from the Permian of East Indies as well, but their late Carbo...

Back to Top