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The Shawangunk and Martinsburg Formations revisited; sedimentology, stratigraphy, mineralogy, geochemistry, structure and paleontology

December 31, 2009

In southeastern New York Middle Silurian Shawangunk Formation (Figure 1), containing gray conglomerate, sandstone and shale, lies unconformably above the Ordovician Martinsburg Formation, consisting of shales and graywackes. In southwestern New York, near the Port Jervis area, The Shawangunk Formation is overlain by the Bloomsburg Red Beds, the same stratigraphic sequence that occurs in Pennsylvania and New Jersey to the southwest. The Shawangunk Formation thins gradually from Port Jervis to its pinchout near Hidden Valley and Binnewater, New York. Two tongues of the upper part of the Shawangunk are: the Ellenville Tongue that extends from the Ellenville-Accord area to its feather edge just southwest of the New York-New Jersey border and, the High View Tongue that is restricted to the Wurtsboro area (Epstein and Lyttle, 1987; Epstein, 1993).

Early in the Paleozoic carbonate banks lay along the east coast of the ancient North American continent. During the Ordovician plate convergence commenced in the closing of the Iapetus Sea and a deep basin developed into which thick muds and dirty sands were deposited. These were later lithified into the Martinsburg Formation. Eventually, with continued compression, these sediments were folded and faulted during the complex deformation of the Taconic Orogeny. The trend of these folds in southeastern New York is approximately N20E. As one proceeds westward across the Wallkill Valley these structures become less intense. Subsequent to the Taconic Orogeny mountains rose to the east and coarse sediments were transported westward and deposited as the conglomerates and sandstones of the Shawangunk Formation across the beveled folds of the Martinsburg. Deposition occurred on a plain of alluviation and in a marine basin to the northwest. Erosion of the source area was intense, and the climate, based on the mineralogy of the rocks, was warm and at least semiarid. The source was composed predominately of sedimentary and low-grade metamorphic rocks with exceptionally abundant quartz veins and small local areas of gneiss and granite. As the source highlands were eroded, the steep braided streams of the Shawangunk gave way to more gentle-gradient streams of the Bloomsburg Red Beds.

Publication Year 2009
Title The Shawangunk and Martinsburg Formations revisited; sedimentology, stratigraphy, mineralogy, geochemistry, structure and paleontology
Authors H. R. Feldman, Jack B. Epstein, John A. Smoliga
Publication Type Conference Paper
Publication Subtype Conference Paper
Index ID 70231371
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Eastern Geology and Paleoclimate Science Center