ABSTRACT
Detailed mapping and structural investigations in an area bound to
the west by the Grenvillian basement of the Adirondack Mountains and to
the east by the allochthonous slates of the Taconic Mountains led to the
distinction of a Western Undeformed Zone and an Eastern Deformed Zone.
The former is composed of the gently east-dipping shelf sequence of upper
Cambrian to lower Ordovician clastics and carbonates which unconformably
overlie the Precambrian basement. The latter is characterized by lower
to middle Ordovician carbonates, striking roughly north-south and dipping
predominantly to the east, which are overlain by well-cleaved shales and
slates. The stratigraphic sequence is thought to represent the tectonic
stages of super-continent rifting (Bird & Dewey, 1970; Rankin, 1976),
thermal subsidence of the passive margin and ocean transgression (McKenzie,
1978), and obduction of slope/rise shales and slates (Rowley & Delano,
1979; Rowley & Kidd, 1981).
The only published geologic maps which include the entire study area
are the Vermont Centennial Map (Doll et al., 1961) and the Geologic Map
of New York State (Fisher et al., 1970), both at a scale of 1: 250,000.
While these maps and other previous studies (Rodgers, 1937; Cady, 1945;
Zen, 1961; and Fisher, 1984) correctly identified the rocks in the area
as faulted and deformed, the extent and nature of deformation was heretofore
unrealized. In addition, some strata and structures were either not identified
or were misinterpreted (i.e. Unit 1-def and the Root Pond Thrust).
In contrast, this thesis identifies four major east-dipping thrust
faults in the Eastern Deformed Zone; from west to east they are the Temple
Road, Shaw Mountain, Root Pond, and Forbes Hill Thrusts. Regional geology
suggests east over west thrusting driven by convergent plate motion during
the medial Ordovician Taconic Orogeny (Chapple, 1973; Rowley & Kidd,
1981). I propose that the thrust faults in the field area represent an
imbricate duplex system formed by the foreland propagation of thrusts during
Taconic Allochthon emplacement. Movement along normal faults is interpreted
to be a response to the loading and ensuing flexural extension of the subducting
slab. The sequential development of the structures in the field area, as
well as the processes causing their formation, are discussed in detail
in the final chapter.
Based on stratigraphic and structural evidence, regional structures
are correlated with those in the field area. Furthermore, supported by
evidence from Coney et al., (1972), I propose that the Temple Road, Shaw
Mountain, and Root Pond Thrusts represent the southern extension of the
Champlain Thrust System, the location of which was previously unknown this
far south.
Granducci, J.L., 1995. Stratigraphy and structure at the southern end
of Lake Champlain in Benson, Vermont. Unpublished MSc. thesis, State University
of New York at Albany. 106 pp., +xi; 2 folded plates (maps)
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE Oversize
(*) QE 40 Z899 1995 G73
Return to MS Theses completed in the Geological Sciences Program, University at Albany