Tectonic Influence on Sedimentation Patterns, Upper Ordovician of Eastern North America
Brian D. Keith
The upper part of the Champlainian Series and all of the Cincinnatian Series
(both parts of the Upper Ordovician Series on the newly published COSUNA charts)
can be divided up into seven time
slices
: the late part of the Blackriverian
Age, Rocklandian, Kirkfieldian, Shermanian, Edenian, Maysvillian Ages, and early
part of Richmondian Age. Analysis of the rocks, using these
time
slices
in
eastern North America, shows five regional facies packages: (1) clean
carbonates, (2) mixed carbonates and terrigenous clastics, (3) shale, (4)
terrigenous clastics coarser than shale, and (5) terrigenous clastics prograded
over carbonates. The latter is considered a facies because this style of
sedimentation is integral to the Upper Ordovician.
Regional tectonic events related to plate collision along the eastern margin
of North America had a direct influence on the sedimentation pattern of these
facies packages. The extensive clean carbonate platform represented by upper
Blackriverian rocks was replaced by widespread argillaceous carbonates during
Rocklandian, Kirkfieldian, and Shermanian time
. Also, by Shermanian
time
, a
linear belt of shale deposition bisected the carbonate platform from the
southwest to the northeast. South of this trend, carbonate sedimentation
continued essentially without interruption in response to tectonic stability
until the end of the Ordovician Period. To the north, the carbonate platform
deepened and was later flooded by shale during Edenian and Maysvillian
time
.
Starting during the Maysvillian nd continuing into the Richmondian, upwarping
and erosion of the Taconic highlands caused large-scale terrigenous clastic
progradation over the northeastern part of the platform.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91041©1987 AAPG Eastern Section Meeting, Columbus, Ohio, October 7-10, 1987.