Middlesex Formation Explained

Middlesex Formation
Type:Formation
Age:Frasnian
Prilithology:Black Shale
Namedfor:Town of Middlesex, NY
Country:United States
Unitof:Sonyea Group
Underlies:Cashaqua Shale or Pulteney shale
Overlies:Genesee Group
Thickness:6–75feet

The Middlesex Formation is a carbon rich black shale geologic formation found in the Appalachian Basin. It represents one of several transgressive events (rising sea levels) during the Late Devonian.[1]

Description

The Middlesex is a laminated dark grey to black mudstones and siltstone. It developed in an Anoxic environment. Further evidence of this is the lack of bioturbation. There are also sparse sand and silt layers suggesting that they were single event deposits.[2]

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: KIRCHGASSER . WILLIAM T. . OVER . D. JEFFREY . 9 December 2023 . FRASNIAN (UPPER DEVONIAN) STRATA OF THE GENESEE RIVER VALLEY, WESTERN NEW YORK STATE . 9 December 2023 . Otto's Website.
  2. Schieber . J. . 1999-07-01 . Distribution and deposition of mudstone facies in the Upper Devonian Sonyea Group of New York . Journal of Sedimentary Research . 69 . 4 . 909–925 . 10.2110/jsr.69.909 . 1527-1404. subscription .