Paper No. 4
Presentation Time: 2:10 PM
THE MOHAWK VALLEY DRILL CORE BONANZA:NEW INSIGHTS RELATING TO THE POST-SAUK SUCCESSION AS SEEN THROUGH CORE AND OUTCROP PERSPECTIVES
A major cache of private sector drill cores, discovered and reposited at the NY State Survey, has been measured. Topmost Sauk and post-Sauk strata (inclusive of Black River, Trenton, Utica, and Schenectady divisions) have been examined in their entirety for 53 Mohawk Valley core sites. The Grenville basal Sauk nonconformity contact is present in, at least, 37 of these cores. An unusually thick (19m) Black River Limestone succession is developed in a core at Riceville, immediately southeast of the Noses Fault north of Gloversville; this succession displays internal and bounding discontinuities and differentiation into lower Lowville-type and upper Watertown-type divisions. Moreover, a prominent, 15 cm-thick, K-bentonite bed in mid-succession could correlate to the well-known Deike or Millbrig ashes. In the Broadalbin and Gloversville cores, southeast of Riceville, micrite clast breccias occur between Sauk dolostones and the overlying Glens Falls Limestone; these breccias appear to link NW into the thicker, down-dropped Riceville Black River section. Differentially thicker Napanee and higher Trenton units above the Black River at Riceville further support the idea of a down-to-the-west block rotation in this area. Spectacular, bitumen-filled vertical burrows, as seen at Ingham Mills, occur below discontinuities in the Black River interval in the Indian Castle and Riceville cores. Numerous cores in the Middleville Herkimer area allow linkage of key medial Trenton and Utica limestones, discontinuities, and K-bentonite beds from outcrop into the adjacent subsurface. A core from East Herkimer closes a vexing outcrop gap below the newly recognized Jacksonburg Bed and shows that it is a condensed, basin margin facies of the basal Rust Limestone. Three cores extend into the Schenectady Formation. One of these, displays 300 m of turbiditic siltstone and shale deposits; this long section dwarfs Schenectady outcrops in the medial Mohawk Valley area, and provides new insights regarding the nature and timing of Taconian basin filling.