Title: Middle Ordovician to Late Silurian Geology
1Middle Ordovician to Late Silurian Geology
2Middle Ordovician
- Shallow water limestones and dolomites of Great
American Bank change - Mudcracks stromatolites disappear
- Beds become thinner
- Fauna increases in abundance diversity
- Brachs, bryos, trilos, corals, molluscs, etc.
- Volcanic ashes appear
3Middle Ordovician
- Limestones abruptly overlain by black shale (10s
to 100s meters) - Shale is black from organic matter
- Fauna is very restricted
- Graptolites, few cephalopods trilos
4Middle Ordovician
- Black shales succeeded by 100s of meters of
interbedded shale and immature litharenites
(Flysch) - Sandstones have very distinctive sedimentary
structures
5Structures in Sandstones
- Sharp, erosional base
- Contact with underlying shale is abrupt
- Tops are commonly gradational into overlying
shales
6Structures in Sandstones
- Basal erosion surfaces commonly show Flute Casts
- Flutes show direction of current from East!
- Flutes widen in downcurrent direction
7Structures in Sandstones
- Graded Bedding within sandstone beds
- Graded interval may be overlain by Ripples
Small Scale Cross Stratification - Tops of beds grade into overlying shale
8Structures in Sandstones
- Sharp, erosional base /- Flute Casts
- Internally graded
- Graded interval may have ripples /- small scale
cross stratification near top - Sequence repeats countless times
- Bouma Sequence
9Middle to Late Ordovician Flysch
- Thick sequences of interbedded dark, graptolitic
shales and immature, litharenites - Commonly deformed
- Deformation may have been syndepositional
10Late Ordovician to Middle Silurian Molasse
- Molasse 100s to 1000s of meters thick
- Red shales
- Red shales with red sandstones
- Quartz arenites and quartz pebble conglomerates
- Follows Deformation
11Molasse
- Interbedded red shales and sandstones
- Sandstones are thicker than in flysch
- Sandstones show different sedimentary structures
- Shales may have mudcracks
12Molasse Sandstones
- More quartz-rich sublitharenites
- 10s of centimeters to several meters thick,
each. - Bases are erosional grain size fines upward, but
not as single graded beds - Large small scale cross stratification planar
stratification
13Upper Molasse
- Red Molasse passes upward into White Molasse
- Quartz arenites and quartz pebble conglomerates
- May have marine fossils
14An Example of Facies in the White Molasse
East quartz pebble conglomerates Shawangunk
Conglomerate
Central Quartz arenites Tuscarora Sandstone
West Interbedded quartz arenites dark grey
shales Tuscarora Sandstone
15Review of Sedimentary Sequence
- Molasse (top) red sandstones and shales
- White Molasse (top)
- Red Molasse
- Late Ordovician to Silurian
- Flysch immature sandstones and dark shales
- Middle to Late Ordovician
- Flysch Molasse Clastic Wedge
- Black Shales starved basin
- Middle Ordovician
- Limestones (base) Great American Bank
- Cambrian to Middle Ordovician
16Tectonic Interpretations of the Sedimentary
Sequence
- Great American Bank Passive Margin (Base)
tectonically quiet Pre-orogenic - Black Shales Starved Basin early orogenic
subsidence - Flysch Synorogenic
- Molasse (Top) Post Orogenic
- Red Molasse erosion of orogen
- White Molasse transgression and reworking of
Red Molasse
17But, what does it mean?
- Great American Bank
- Passive Margin Opening of Iapetus
- Middle Ordovician Limestone
- Facies indicate increased depth
- Transgression?
- Increased Subsidence?
- Volcanic ashes indicate proximity of volcanic
source - Passive Margin replaced by Starved Basin
increased subsidence
18But, what does it mean?
- Flysch indicates new sediment source to the east
high relief, low grade metamorphics volcanics - Syndepositional deformation indicates Orogeny
- Taconic Orogeny
- Molasse post-orogenic destruction of Taconic
Mountains - Queenston Clastic Wedge
19What is a Clastic Wedge?
- Wedge-shaped mass of sediment shed from mountains
- Wedge is thicker and coarser grained close to
source - Wedge gets thinner and finer grained away from
source - Usually made of flysch molasse
20Taconic Orogeny
- Subduction begins somewhere in Iapetus
- Subduction creates island arc Taconia
- Subduction closes part of Iapetus
- Taconia is accreted to North America
- Subduction begins beneath new eastern margin of
North America (?) Andean-type convergent margin
(?)
21Sedimentary Responses to Tectonic Processes
- For every tectonic event, there is a sedimentary
response - Passive Margin/Thermal Subsidence thick wedge
of limestones, quartz arenites, other quartz-rich
sandstones - Sinking of passive margin black shales
- Approach of island arc or other landmass
immature sandstones - Erosional destruction of orogen - molasse
22Top Ten Signs You Are Experiencing Orogeny
- 10) You get that sinking feeling.
- Apparent transgression caused by increased
subsidence - 9) The sky is falling, and it isnt snow!
- Volcanic ashes appear in sequence
- 8) You get the munchies for more sediment.
- Formation of Starved Basin
- 7) People say your sediments are so immature!
- 6) You feel the need to dump your garbage on
others. - Formation of Clastic Wedge
23Top Ten Signs You Are Experiencing Orogeny
- 5) You definitely get bent out of shape.
- Folding
- 4) You cant deny that you have faults.
- Thrust faulting
- 3) You intrude where you are not welcome.
- Igneous Intrusions (/- lava flows)
- 2) You get all hot and bothered.
- Regional Metamorphism
- 1) Youre caught in a cover-up, trying to hide
your true inclinations. - Formation of Unconformities (especially angular)