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Late Devonian lonestones, diamictites, and coeval black shales from the Appalachian Basin; discerning relationships and implications for Late Devonian Appalachian history and glacially driven seafloor anoxia

Frank R. Ettensohn, Geoff Clayton, R. Thomas Lierman, Charles E. Mason, Federico F. Krause, Christopher DeBuhr, Thomas B. Brackman, Eric D. Anderson, Allen J. Dennis and Jack C. Pashin
Late Devonian lonestones, diamictites, and coeval black shales from the Appalachian Basin; discerning relationships and implications for Late Devonian Appalachian history and glacially driven seafloor anoxia (in The Appalachian geology of John M. Dennison; rocks, people, and a few good restaurants along the way, Katharine Lee Avary (editor), Kenneth O. Hasson (editor) and Richard J. Diecchio (editor))
Special Paper - Geological Society of America (August 2020) 545: 67-88

Abstract

A 3 ton (2.7 metric tonnes [t]), granitoid lonestone with Appalachian provenance was found in situ in offshore Devonian black shale in northeastern Kentucky, United States, and is denoted herein as the Robinson boulder, or lonestone, after its discoverer, Michael J. Robinson. This large boulder appears to have been displaced nearly 500 km from its source on the opposite margin of the Acadian/Neoacadian Appalachian foreland basin. While previous identifications of possible lonestones have been attributed to Pleistocene glacial events, scrutiny of this lonestone's origin suggests that the boulder, which was embedded in the Upper Devonian Cleveland Shale Member of the Ohio Shale in northeastern Kentucky, is most likely a Devonian ice-rafted glacial dropstone. Notably, palynologic correlation with reported glacial diamictites elsewhere in the basin indicates such a source. Together, the dropstone and diamictites, separated by approximately 500 km, provide evidence for alpine glaciation in the ancient Acadian/Neoacadian orogen and for tidewater glaciers in the adjacent, eastern margin of the foreland basin. The latest Devonian marine transgression and Neoacadian foreland subsidence are interpreted to have been associated with tidewater glacial connections to the open sea. Importantly, the existence of this dropstone and its likely glacial precursor events require new considerations about contemporary black-shale sedimentation and the influence of tectonics on the delivery of glacial sediments to foreland basins.


ISSN: 0072-1077
EISSN: 2331-219X
Coden: GSAPAZ
Serial Title: Special Paper - Geological Society of America
Serial Volume: 545
Title: Late Devonian lonestones, diamictites, and coeval black shales from the Appalachian Basin; discerning relationships and implications for Late Devonian Appalachian history and glacially driven seafloor anoxia
Title: The Appalachian geology of John M. Dennison; rocks, people, and a few good restaurants along the way
Author(s): Ettensohn, Frank R.Clayton, GeoffLierman, R. ThomasMason, Charles E.Krause, Federico F.DeBuhr, ChristopherBrackman, Thomas B.Anderson, Eric D.Dennis, Allen J.Pashin, Jack C.
Author(s): Avary, Katharine Leeeditor
Author(s): Hasson, Kenneth O.editor
Author(s): Diecchio, Richard J.editor
Affiliation: University of Kentucky, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Lexington, KY, United States
Affiliation: West Virginia Geological and Economic Survey, Morgantown, WV, United States
Pages: 67-88
Published: 20200812
Text Language: English
Publisher: Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
ISBN: 9780813795454
References: 182
Accession Number: 2022-025175
Categories: Stratigraphy
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. strat. cols., sect., geol. sketch map
N40°00'00" - N42°00'00", W80°00'00" - W76°00'00"
Secondary Affiliation: University of Sheffield, GBR, United KingdomEastern Kentucky University, USA, United StatesMorehead State University, USA, United StatesUniversity of Calgary, CAN, CanadaWestern Kentucky University, USA, United StatesUniversity of South Carolina-Aiken, USA, United StatesOklahoma State University, USA, United States
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2022, American Geosciences Institute.
Update Code: 2022
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