1-20 OF 1295 RESULTS FOR

Frederick Formation

Results shown limited to content with bounding coordinates.
Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Series: DNAG, Centennial Field Guides
Published: 01 January 1987
DOI: 10.1130/0-8137-5405-4.395
EISBN: 9780813754116
... Location Oil shales occur along Frederick Brook in Albert County in southeastern New Brunswick (Figs. 1, 2). The area is publicly accessible via automobile by driving 13 mi (21 km) south of Moncton along New Brunswick 114 to the town of Hillsborough. To reach the site, continue south along New...
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2007
Environmental Geosciences (2007) 14 (1): 31–48.
... differing susceptibilities of karst feature creation. Although the Triassic Leesburg Member of the Bull Run Formation and Rocky Springs Station Member of the Cambrian Frederick Formation have many surface depressions within their outcrop belts, the Lime Kiln Member of the Frederick Formation...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Geologic and anthropogenic factors influencing kar...
Second thumbnail for: Geologic and anthropogenic factors influencing kar...
Third thumbnail for: Geologic and anthropogenic factors influencing kar...
Image
Geologic sketch map of the distribution of active sinkholes and their relationship to roadside drainage ways along Interstate 70 in southeastern Frederick City. Most of the active sinkholes are in the outcrop belt of the Adamstown Member of the Frederick Formation. Note that the area of lined drainage on the north side of the highway has no active sinkholes,whereas the corresponding unlined area to the south has numerous sinkholes. Geologic symbols: Frederick Formation, Cfa = Adamstown Member; Cfl = Lime Kiln Member.
Published: 01 March 2007
Figure 14 Geologic sketch map of the distribution of active sinkholes and their relationship to roadside drainage ways along Interstate 70 in southeastern Frederick City. Most of the active sinkholes are in the outcrop belt of the Adamstown Member of the Frederick Formation. Note that the area
Image
Examples of drainage lowlands acting as sites of sinkhole activity. (A) Parking lot built in the Ceresville Member of the Grove Formation in the northeast City of Frederick collapsed along the prehistoric drainage area. (B) Coalescing sinkholes in the Lime Kiln Member of the Frederick Formation along the drainage lowland in the southeast City of Frederick.
Published: 01 March 2007
Figure 8 Examples of drainage lowlands acting as sites of sinkhole activity. (A) Parking lot built in the Ceresville Member of the Grove Formation in the northeast City of Frederick collapsed along the prehistoric drainage area. (B) Coalescing sinkholes in the Lime Kiln Member of the Frederick
Image
Geologic map of an area at the border of the Frederick and Walkersville quadrangles illustrating the relationship between the timing of sinkhole development and the removal of surficial deposits (river terrace). Note how sinkholes were confined to the banks of the Monocacy River prior to excavation, but became more abundant in the Lime Kiln and Ceresville members after terrace gravels were removed. Geologic symbols: Frederick Formation, Cfr = Rocky Springs Station Member; Cfa = Adamstown Member; Cfl = Lime Kiln Member; Grove Formation, Ogc = Ceresville Member.
Published: 01 March 2007
to excavation, but became more abundant in the Lime Kiln and Ceresville members after terrace gravels were removed. Geologic symbols: Frederick Formation, Cfr = Rocky Springs Station Member; Cfa = Adamstown Member; Cfl = Lime Kiln Member; Grove Formation, Ogc = Ceresville Member.
Image
(A) Fracture pattern exhibited by the Ceresville Member of the Grove Formation. The azimuth of the main joint set marked by the strike arrow is 65°. (B) Intersection of joint and cleavage planes as manifested by intersecting and coalescing sinkholes in the Lime Kiln Member of the Frederick Formation. (C) Solution-widened joints characteristic of the Triassic Leesburg Member. (D) Buried and filled joint surfaces in the Leesburg Member showing the solution-widened fractures.
Published: 01 March 2007
of the Frederick Formation. (C) Solution-widened joints characteristic of the Triassic Leesburg Member. (D) Buried and filled joint surfaces in the Leesburg Member showing the solution-widened fractures.
Series: GSA Field Guide
Published: 01 January 2015
DOI: 10.1130/2015.0040(04)
EISBN: 9780813756400
... that is a part of the Piedmont physiographic province, exposes platform margin and off-platform Cambrian and Ordovician rocks assigned to the Frederick and Grove Formations. The Frederick Valley is separated from Pennsylvania’s Conestoga Valley by Triassic rocks of the Gettysburg Basin, but represents similar...
Series: AAPG Memoir
Published: 01 January 2012
DOI: 10.1306/13331500M983500
EISBN: 9781629810201
... Pennsylvania). This regressive phase was interrupted by a third-order deepening event that produced the oolitic member of the lower Rockdale Run and the Woodsboro Member of the Grove Formation in the Frederick Valley. Restricted circulation continued into the Whiterockian, with deposition of the upper Rockdale...
Journal Article
Published: 01 December 1990
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1990) 38 (4): 452–474.
..., le degré de maturité augmentant de l’île de Graham centrale (0,40 %Ro rand 1 à la partie nord de l’île de Moresby (1,53 %Ro rand ). Le DMO des couches du Crétacé (formations Longarm, Haida, Skidegate, et Honna) augmente à partir du nord-ouest de l’île de Graham (0,29 à 4,86 %Ro rand) , en passant par...
Image
Folds in the Albert Formation. (a) Mesoscopic gently southwest-plunging upright folds observed along Frederick Brook. (b) Equal area stereoplot of orientation data from Albert Formation rocks along Frederick Brook. Bedding plots on a great circle girdle, indicating an overall shallow plunge to the southwest, similar to measurements from exposed mesoscopic folds.
Published: 01 December 2006
Fig. 9. Folds in the Albert Formation. (a) Mesoscopic gently southwest-plunging upright folds observed along Frederick Brook. (b) Equal area stereoplot of orientation data from Albert Formation rocks along Frederick Brook. Bedding plots on a great circle girdle, indicating an overall shallow
Book Chapter

Author(s)
Juergen Reinhardt
Series: SEPM Special Publication
Published: 01 January 1977
DOI: 10.2110/pec.77.25.0083
EISBN: 9781565761551
... canyons are local features at or near the carbonate shelf margin. The composition and organization of breccia deposits and surrounding rocks in the Shady Dolomite (Lower and Middle Cambrian) near Austinville, Virginia, in the Kinzers Formation (Lower and Middle Cambrian) near Thomasville, Pennsylvania...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 March 1952
GSA Bulletin (1952) 63 (3): 275–322.
... of Virginia, West Virginia, Mary-land, and Pennsylvania (Elbrook and Conococheague formations), and (3) the Frederick Valley (Frederick limestone) of Maryland. Cambrian stratigraphy in the three areas is discussed, and a new member is named in the lower part of the Conococheague formation. A general facies...
... km in depth and are in a 1-km-thick zone striking ~036° and dipping ~50°SE, consistent with a 028°, 50°SE main-shock nodal plane having mostly reverse slip. This cluster extends ~10 km along strike. The Quail fault zone projects to the surface in gneiss of the Ordovician Chopawamsic Formation just...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 February 1962
AAPG Bulletin (1962) 46 (2): 219–234.
...H. R. Greiner ABSTRACT Three lithologic units can be recognized in the Mississippian Albert Formation in New Brunswick, Canada: the Dawson Settlement, Frederick Brook, and Hiram Brook Members. Typically non-marine redbeds lie above and below the grayish beds of the oil- and gas-bearing Albert...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Facies and Sedimentary Environments of Albert Shal...
Second thumbnail for: Facies and Sedimentary Environments of Albert Shal...
Third thumbnail for: Facies and Sedimentary Environments of Albert Shal...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 November 1956
GSA Bulletin (1956) 67 (11): 1521–1528.
...R. B HOY; R. L SCHUMACHER Abstract Diamond drill cores from an area 5 miles southwest of Frederick, Maryland, reveal significant stratigraphic and structural information. The Antietam and Tomstown (Lower Cambrian) and Grove formation (Ordovician) are involved. The Antietam has some quartzite layers...
Image
Published: 01 November 1932
TABLE II FRENCH CLASSIFICATION OF GEOLOGICAL FORMATIONS (By W. P. Haynes, Frederick G. Clapp, and Pierre Lamare)
Journal Article
Published: 01 April 2022
Earth Sciences History (2022) 41 (1): 186–216.
...–1965) and by geologists Captain Frederick William Shotton (1906–1990) and Major Gordon Lyall Paver (1913–1988). In 1944, it was guided by geologist Captain Howard Digby Roberts (1913–1971), leading a detachment from 42nd Geological Section of the South African Engineer Corps that pioneered earth...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: BRITISH MILITARY CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE GEOLOGY OF M...
Second thumbnail for: BRITISH MILITARY CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE GEOLOGY OF M...
Third thumbnail for: BRITISH MILITARY CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE GEOLOGY OF M...
Journal Article
Published: 01 May 1959
Journal of Paleontology (1959) 33 (3): 375–398.
... including 15 species is described from the upper Conococheague of Pennsylvania and Maryland. The Frederick limestone of Maryland yielded 19 species of Trempealeauian trilobites, of which only one was previously known from the formation. The overlying Grove limestone, hitherto considered entirely Lower...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 September 2008
Economic Geology (2008) 103 (6): 1269–1284.
... volcanic flows; and (3) the Frederick House Lake formation, composed of massive and pillowed mafic flows. The distribution and thickness of argillites and felsic volcaniclastic rocks define a synvolcanic graben in which the Dundonald South and Alexo Ni-Cu-(PGE) deposits occur within the center...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Komatiitic Sills and Multigenerational Peperite at...
Second thumbnail for: Komatiitic Sills and Multigenerational Peperite at...
Third thumbnail for: Komatiitic Sills and Multigenerational Peperite at...
Journal Article
Published: 01 May 1984
Journal of Paleontology (1984) 58 (3): 834–842.
... of this age known from the Taconic sequence. The fauna has affinity with Dresbachian faunas of the Conococheague and Frederick limestones of the central Appalachians; the Gorge Formation of northwestern Vermont; boulders in conglomerates in Quebec and in western Newfoundland; and Alaska. The stratigraphic...