ABSTRACT
Medial Ordovician rocks exposed in westernmost New England and eastern
New York State include thick sequences of marine sandstones which are part
of a belt extending from Newfoundland to Tennessee. A petrographic study
was made of 237 samples distributed across the entire outcrop belt (approx.
250 km. north-south along strike and 190 km. east-west across strike).
Two distinct types of sandstone are recognized, the oldest, and most
widespread, is a deep water lithic wacke deposited by turbidity currents
and found interbedded with shale (flysch). The younger sandstone is found
only in the southeastern part of the study area and is a lithic to quartz
arenite which was deposited in a shallower water environment (molasse).
The composition of these sandstones is mainly quartz (50-70%) along
with minor amounts of chert, feldspar and lithic fragments all in a varying
amount of matrix and cement. The lithic fragments (7-12% of a given sample)
are mainly sedimentary (shale, siltstone, greywacke and sandstone) with
minor amounts of metamorphics (phyllite, slate and schist), carbonates,
volcanics (silicic to mafic) and volcaniclastics. No minerals indicative
of medium to high grade metamorphism were found.
Paleocurrent evidence suggests that the oldest flysch was deposited
from the east in a number of small overlapping fans while the younger flysch
and the molasse appear to be part of a single large fan whose source is
to the south. Along strike no significant change in composition is seen
but across strike as the flysch grows younger an increase in K-feldspar
and carbonate material is noted with the greatest increase occurring in
the molassic sediments.
These clastic sandstones were deposited in an elongate basin which
formed as the result of an arc-continent collision during the Taconic Orogeny.
The flysch sands are thought to be derived from recycled continental rise
sediments (eg. Taconic Allochthon) with a contribution of volcanics
and volcaniclastics from the colliding island arc. The lack of ophiolitic
detritus indicates ophiolitic obduction either did not take place or occurred
to a much lesser degree than in the northern extension of this belt in
Canada. The increase of K-feldspar and carbonate may indicate the progressive
exposure of Grenville basement and covering shelf carbonates, by overthrusting.
Tanski, S.A., 1984. Provenance study of the Middle Ordovician sandstones
of New York and western Vermont. Unpublished MSc. thesis, State University
of New York at Albany. 112 pp., +ix; 1 folded plate (map)
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE Oversize
(*) QE 40 Z899 1985 T35
Return to MS Theses completed in the Geological
Sciences Program, University at Albany