LATE DEVONIAN MARINE-NONMARINE TRANSITION IN THE CATSKILL CLASTIC WEDGE: CURIOSER AND CURIOSER
Features observed in these exposures suggest that the marine-nonmarine transition may not have been simply the result of a gradual fall in relative sea level. Within the uppermost Foreknobs, beds of mudstone with polygonal mudcracks overlie intensely bioturbated sandstones containing marine trace fossils. These strata are interbedded with a meter-thick debris flow with inverse grading and oblate quartz pebbles up to 5 cm in long dimension. Overlying this sequence is approximately 60 meters of shale with marine trace fossils and a variety of tool marks. Tool marks include drag marks up a meter in length and 10 cm in width and a series of smaller structures produced by flattened pebbles that appear to have slid or been pushed a short distance along the muddy bottom and then left in place. The marine-nonmarine transition recorded in these strata appears to have been accompanied by relatively rapid, localized oscillations in sea level. Desiccation features suggest arid conditions; the debris flow and unusual tool marks may be ice-contact or glacial in nature as has been suggested for the Late Devonian-Early Mississippian Spechty Kopf Formation in Pennsylvania.