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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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North America
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Appalachians
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Blue Ridge Mountains (1)
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Piedmont (2)
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Southern Appalachians (4)
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United States
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Alabama
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Chilton County Alabama (5)
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Clay County Alabama (2)
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Cleburne County Alabama (1)
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Coosa County Alabama (6)
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Shelby County Alabama (2)
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Talladega County Alabama (4)
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Blue Ridge Mountains (1)
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Georgia (1)
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Talladega Front (4)
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commodities
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metal ores
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tin ores (1)
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fossils
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Invertebrata
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geochronology methods
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middle Paleozoic (1)
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Talladega Group (3)
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igneous rocks
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igneous rocks
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plutonic rocks
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granites (2)
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pegmatite (1)
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metamorphic rocks
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metamorphic rocks
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gneisses (1)
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metasedimentary rocks (3)
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phyllites (1)
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schists
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minerals
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orthosilicates
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nesosilicates
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Primary terms
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electron microscopy (1)
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faults (3)
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folds (1)
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foliation (1)
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geochemistry (2)
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igneous rocks
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plutonic rocks
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granites (2)
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pegmatite (1)
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intrusions (2)
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Invertebrata
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Archaeocyatha (1)
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lineation (1)
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metal ores
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tantalum ores (1)
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tin ores (1)
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metamorphic rocks
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gneisses (1)
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metasedimentary rocks (3)
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metavolcanic rocks (1)
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phyllites (1)
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schists
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greenstone (1)
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metamorphism (1)
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North America
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Appalachians
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Blue Ridge Mountains (1)
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Piedmont (2)
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Southern Appalachians (4)
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orogeny (2)
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Paleozoic
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Cambrian
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Lower Cambrian
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Shady Dolomite (1)
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Devonian (1)
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middle Paleozoic (1)
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Ordovician (2)
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Silurian (1)
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Talladega Group (3)
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paragenesis (1)
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petrology (2)
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phase equilibria (1)
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plate tectonics (2)
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sedimentary rocks
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carbonate rocks
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stratigraphy (3)
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structural geology (3)
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tectonics (5)
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tectonophysics (1)
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United States
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Alabama
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Chilton County Alabama (5)
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Clay County Alabama (2)
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Cleburne County Alabama (1)
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Coosa County Alabama (6)
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Shelby County Alabama (2)
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Talladega County Alabama (4)
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Blue Ridge Mountains (1)
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Georgia (1)
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Talladega Front (4)
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sedimentary rocks
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sedimentary rocks
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carbonate rocks
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dolostone (1)
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siliciclastics (1)
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sediments
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siliciclastics (1)
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Ordovician–Silurian back-arc silicic magmatism in the southernmost Appalachians
Analysis of a regional middle Paleozoic unconformity along the distal southeastern Laurentian margin, southernmost Appalachians: Implications for tectonic evolution
Mineralogy and paragenesis of the McAllister Sn-Ta-bearing pegmatite, Coosa County, Alabama
New paleontologic evidence constraining the age and paleotectonic setting of the Talladega slate belt, southern Appalachians
Stratigraphy and structure of the central Talladega slate belt, Alabama Appalachians
The Talladega slate belt in eastern Alabama represents a crystalline thrust sheet composed of low-grade metasediments. Three major lithologic sequences comprise the Talladega slate belt: (1) the Kahatchee Mountain Group, (2) the Sylacauga Marble Group, and (3) the Talladega Group. The contact relationships between the Sylacauga Marble Group and the Talladega Group indicate that the phyllites and slates of the Talladega Group rest unconformably on marbles of the Sylacauga Marble Group. Previous workers have identified specific stratigraphic sequences within the Talladega Group both in the north-central portion of the Talladega slate belt and in the southern portion of the belt. Little work has been carried out in the south-central portion of the Talladega slate belt, a region intermediate between areas to the northeast and southwest where the regional stratigraphy has been defined. To the northwest in Cleburne and Clay Counties, Alabama, the Talladega Group has been broken down into the Heflin Phyllite, the Able Gap Formation, and the Chulafinnee Schist. To the southwest in Chilton County, Alabama, similar units have been mapped as the Lay Dam Formation, the Butting Ram Sandstone, and the Jemison Chert. These units have not been mapped through this intermediate south-central region of the Talladega slate belt because of the absence by faulting of a major sandstone unit, the Cheaha Quartzite, which has been used for regional correlation. Another prominent unit, the Jemison Chert, which outcrops to the southeast of the Cheaha Quartzite, continues across this region and was used to correlate the regional stratigraphy from the northeast with that in the southwest. Detailed mapping has shown that a small slice of paper-thin quartzites of the Jemison Chert interval has overridden the Cheaha Quartzite. The geometric relationships between these two units, the differing petrologic character of these ridge-forming lithologies, the duplication of the Jemison Chert interval, and the emplacement of this imbricate slice of Jemison, in addition to structural fabric data, suggest that this termination of the Cheaha Quartzite is fault related.
Stratigraphic relationships of the carbonate sequence in the Talladega slate belt, Chilton and Coosa Counties, Alabama
A major carbonate sequence occurs within the lower part of the Talladega slate belt in Chilton, Coosa, and Talladega Counties. The carbonate units are overlain by a major regional unconformity known as the pre-Lay Dam Formation unconformity. The carbonate sequence below the unconformity is represented in different areas by the Jumbo Dolomite, the Marble Valley carbonates, and the Sylacauga marbles. At the type location in Chilton County, the Jumbo is a 67-m-thick, predominantly thickly bedded dolostone. The contact with the underlying slates of the Wash Creek Slate (Mount Zion Formation) is an interlayered zone of dolostone and fine, commonly graphitic, clastic rock. This zone grades upward into a dolostone that contains a few pelitic layers. Near the base, the Jumbo contains intraclasts and recrystallized fragments up to 6 cm in length. Rounded quartz grains are disseminated in the lower section of the Jumbo. Near the middle of the massively bedded dolostone is a layer that contains intraclasts of massive and laminated carbonate as much as 12 cm in length. Just below the unconformity in the type section, the upper part of the Jumbo contains laminations of fine-grained clastic rock. Along strike to the northeast and southwest the unconformity appears to have erosional relief. Less than 1 km west of the type location the unconformity truncates the carbonate sequence completely. To the northeast the pre-Lay Dam Formation unconformity appears to rise in the section in the Marble Valley carbonates and the Sylacauga marbles, exposing a very thick carbonate sequence. Stratigraphic and structural relationships of the Jumbo, Marble Valley, and Sylacauga marbles are not yet resolved. Initial data indicate that the Jumbo occurs stratigraphically below and to the northwest of the Marble Valley carbonates, suggesting that the Jumbo is the oldest carbonate unit in the sequence.