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6 - Middle Ordovician Trenton Group of New York, USA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 November 2010

Hans Hess
Affiliation:
Basel Natural History Museum, Switzerland
William I. Ausich
Affiliation:
Ohio State University
Carlton E. Brett
Affiliation:
University of Cincinnati
Michael J. Simms
Affiliation:
Ulster Museum, Belfast
Carlton E. Brett
Affiliation:
University of Cincinnati, Ohio
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Summary

A QUARRY FOR COLLECTING TRILOBITES AND ECHINODERMS

Classic outcrops of the Middle Ordovician Trenton Beds are exposed along the Trenton Gorge of West Canada Creek and in Mill, Cincinnati, and other creeks tributary to the Mohawk River at the town of Trenton, Madison County, New York, north of the Mohawk River valley (Fig. 71). A small hand-operated quarry on the property of W. Rust, about 1 km east of Trenton Falls, was opened by the Rust family and Charles Walcott for the purpose of collecting spectacular trilobite and echinoderm fossils from the upper beds of the Trenton Group.

Limestones of the Trenton Group are of late Middle Ordovician age (Trentonian or Caradocian Series, Mohawkian Stage), about 460 million years before present. The productive strata for crinoids occur in the Rust Member of the Denley Formation (Figs. 72, 73).

SHALLOW PLATFORM, RAMP AND BASIN

The Trenton Group comprises some 100–130 m of highly fossiliferous, thin-bedded, grey limestones with thin interbeds of dark grey calcareous shale. Limestones include a variety of lithologies, such as pelmatozoan-rich skeletal and rubbly nodular limestones with remains of bryozoans and pelmatozoans and tabular, graded micritic limestone. The latter have sharp bases, internal planar to cross-lamination and, in some instances, perfectly preserved fossils, including crinoids.

The coarser skeletal limestone facies are considered to have been deposited in shallow shelf settings. These beds show various amounts of winnowing by storm-generated waves and currents. Nodular calcarenites have undergone thorough bioturbation and, in some cases, early diagenetic cementation. The fine-grained lime mudstone beds reflect rapid deposition from low-density turbidity or gradient currents.

Type
Chapter
Information
Fossil Crinoids , pp. 63 - 67
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1999

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