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Post-Paleozoic activity - Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory ...

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324 W. Manspeizer and Others<br />

broad platform (e.g., the Moroccan Meseta) where they contain a<br />

thick evaporite facies with red mudstones and carbonates. Off-<br />

shore basins (e.g., those on the Scotian Shelf) contain both a<br />

detrital and evaporite facies; and some onshore basins (e.g., the<br />

Doukkala and Berrichid on the Moroccan Meseta) contain both<br />

evaporites and volcanics (Manspeizer and others, 1978).<br />

Rocks within these basins compose the Newark Supergroup<br />

(Fig. 4; see discussions later in this chapter by Olsen and by<br />

McHone and Puffer). In North America the Newark Supergroup<br />

is a synrift unit that consists primarily of gray-to-black siltstones<br />

and shales, red-brown mudstones, petromict conglomerates, and<br />

arkosic-to-lithic sandstones; evaporites, limestone, coal lenses,<br />

and aeolianites are locally present in some basins. Whereas all of<br />

the onshore American basins are notably detrital, some of the<br />

offshore basins are thought to be largely evaporitic.<br />

The tholeiitic lava flows that occur only in the upper part of<br />

the synrift sequence were emplaced during the Early Jurassic,<br />

about 20 m.y. after clastic sedimentation began and after 2 to 6<br />

km of clastic sediments had accumulated (Fig. 4). Consequently,<br />

they have not been reported from the exposed southern basins,<br />

which contain strata of Carnian and older ages. Although the<br />

lavas crop out only from the Culpeper basin of Virginia to the<br />

Fundy basin of Nova Scotia, they have been reported (Daniels<br />

and others, 1983) from the subsurface in South Carolina, Georgia,<br />

Alabama, and Florida (Daniels and others, 1983) and from the<br />

BASINS<br />

Gulf of Maine. In addition, most of the onshore basins and adja-<br />

cent basement rocks have been intruded by hypabyssal sills and<br />

dikes (Plate 5A). It is now thought (Olsen, this chapter) that both<br />

these lavas and cross-cutting dikes were emplaced during a rela-<br />

tively brief interval of about 500,000 years in Hettangian time.<br />

Synrift sedimentation appears to have begun in most of the<br />

region by the Late Triassic and ended by the Middle Jurassic<br />

(Fig. 4) with the onset of sea-floor spreading (Plate 5A). Biostrat-<br />

igraphic studies, primarily by Cornet and others (1973), Olsen<br />

and others (1982), and Cornet and Olsen (1985), fix a Late<br />

Triassic age (ranging from Middle to Late Carnian) for the strata<br />

in the Richmond, Taylorsville, Scottsburg, Sanford, Durham, and<br />

Dan River basins (Fig. 4). The strata in the Culpeper, Gettysburg,<br />

Newark, Hartford, and Deerfield basins range in age from Late<br />

Triassic (Camian to Norian) to Early Jurassic (Lias). However,<br />

synrift sedimentation in the Fundy Basin may have begun as early<br />

as the Anisian (Middle Triassic).<br />

Attempts at determining the age of the offshore rift basins<br />

have been less successful, because no wells on the U.S. margin,<br />

and only a few on the Canadian margin, have penetrated the<br />

entire rift sequence (Manspeizer and Cousminer, 1988). The<br />

deepest well on the U.S. margin is the COST G-2 well (Fig. 4),<br />

and it bottomed in the upper part of the rift sequence in Georges<br />

Bank basin (see discussion below). A Late Triassic-Early Juras-<br />

sic age is inferred for some offshore rift basins because they have<br />

SOME KEY<br />

STRATIGRAPHIC HORIZONS<br />

1 CHESTERFIELD GROUP<br />

2 TUCKAHOE GROUP<br />

3 TAVLORSVILLE GROUP<br />

4 CHATHAM GROUP<br />

5 PEKIN FORMATION<br />

6 CUMNOCK FORMATION<br />

7 SANFORD FORMATION<br />

8 CHATHAM GROUP<br />

9 COW BRANCH FORMATION<br />

10 STONEVILLE FORMATION<br />

11 MANASSAS SANDSTONE<br />

12 BALLS BLUFF SILTSTONE<br />

13 MOUNT ZION CHURCH BASALT<br />

14 NEW OXFORD FORMATION<br />

IS GETTVSBURG SHALE<br />

16 ASPERS BASALT<br />

17 STOCKTON FORMATION<br />

18 LOCKATONG FORMATION<br />

19 PASSAIC FORMATION<br />

20 WATCHUNG BASALTS<br />

21 NEW HAVEN ARKOSE<br />

22 HARTFORD BASIN BASALTS<br />

23 PORTLAND FORMATION<br />

24 SUGAR LOAF ARKOSE<br />

25 DEERFIELD BASALT<br />

26 TURNERS FALLS SANDSTONE<br />

27 WOLVILLE FORMATION<br />

28 BLOMIDON FORMATION<br />

29 NORTH MOUNTAIN BASALT<br />

30 SCOTS BAY FORMATION<br />

Figure 4. Time-stratigraphic correlation chart of Newark Supergroup strata for eastern North America,<br />

based on palynofloral zones and extrusive horizons. Data primarily from Comet and Olsen, 1985.<br />

Correlation is also made with Lower Mesozoic strata from the COST G-2 cores as interpreted from<br />

palynomorphs by Manspeizer and Cousminer (1988).<br />

PALYNOZONES<br />

31 CHATHAM-RICHMOND-<br />

TAVLORSVILLE<br />

32 NEW OXFORD-LOCKATONG<br />

33 LOWER PASSAIC-<br />

HEIDLERSBURG<br />

34 MANASSAS-UPPER PASSIAC<br />

35 COROLLINA MEVERIANA<br />

36 COROLLINA TOROSUS<br />

37 COROLLINA MURPHII

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