The Depositional Environment of the Queenston Formation in Southern Ontario
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Abstract
<p>The Queenston Formation has been interpreted as a
non-marine deltaic deposit since the turn of the century
because of its apparent lack of fossils, and evidence for
subaerial exposure. The source of the sediment was interpreted
to be an orogenic zone in New York or Pennsylvannia.</p> <p>Features such as gypsum nodules and limy siltstones
were interpreted as being secondary. However, petrographic
studies have found that the siltstones contain marine fossils
and some gypsum nodules have inclusions of halite. Moreover,
the fine sand grains in the mudrock are not aeolian. Paleocurrents
indicate that the source of the sediment transport
was generally north-south not east-west. The siltstone and
limestone interbeds are flat based, graded, and show no
evidence for channeling. Some beds also contain large escape
burrows.</p> <p>It is proposed that the Queenston Formation was
deposited as a supratidal; mudflat that was regularly flooded
by the sea. The mud could have been transported by longshore
drift from a river somewhere towards the north, as the
paleocurrents in the Queenston mimic major tradewind patterns
for the Late Ordovician.</p>
Description
Title: The Depositional Environment of the Queenston Formation in Southern Ontario, Author: Paul J. Brogly, Location: Thode