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Homewood Formation

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Series: GSA Field Guide
Published: 25 September 2023
DOI: 10.1130/2023.0066(02)
EISBN: 9780813756660
... Formation. The building stone has abundant trace fossils and ripple marks, and is interpreted to have been deposited in shoreface environments with some tidal influence, or possibly in tidal flat environments. The house rests on sandstone bedrock of the Homewood sandstone, a Middle Pennsylvanian unit within...
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Journal Article
Journal: GeoArabia
Publisher: Gulf Petrolink
Published: 01 July 2008
GeoArabia (2008) 13 (3): 39–120.
...Peter Homewood; Philippe Razin; Carine Grélaud; Henk Droste; Volker Vahrenkamp; Monique Mettraux; Joerg Mattner ABSTRACT This field guide describes eleven outcrops of the Natih Formation in the Al Jabal al Akhdar-Jabal Shams and Adam Foothills areas, not far from Nizwa, at the foot of the Oman...
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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 February 1967
GSA Bulletin (1967) 78 (2): 223–258.
...LAWRENCE D MECKEL Abstract During Early and Middle Pennsylvanian time, two major and strikingly different conglomerates were deposited in the northern part of the Central Appalachians. These are the Pottsville Formation, which crops out in the anthracite area, and the Olean (Sharon) Conglomerate...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1900
GSA Bulletin (1900) 11 (1): 145–178.
... Productive Coal Measures” in the northern bituminous fields. It lies between the Homewood sandstone, the upper member of the Pottsville formation, and the Mahoning sandstone, a massive sandstone which forms the lower member of the Conemaugh series or “Lower Barren Measures,” consisting in part of red shales...
Image
(a) The Natih Formation in Wadi Mi’Aidin western flank (photo by Henk Droste). (b) Natih in Wadi Mi’Aidin eastern flank (photo by Peter Homewood). Both (a) and (b) show the Natih E cliff-forming member at the base of the section (lower cliff is 90 m thick), the weathered-back and scree-covered D member in the middle part, and then the bedded, cliff-forming, C member. The upper part of the cliff-forming part of the section shown here is time-equivalent to thinly-bedded source rocks of the Natih B in the intra-shelf basin (see Figure 35). (c) Natih D member, Sequence II-1, Wadi Mi’Aidin (photo by Peter Homewood); low-angle oblique tabular cross-bedded sets of laminated grainy beach facies form a minor cliff a little less than 10 m thick. (d) Natih D member, Wadi Mi’Aidin (photo by Peter Homewood); centimetre-scale, low-angle, oblique tabular cross-bedded sets of laminated grainy beach facies; coarser laminae indicated by arrows. Pocket knife for scale.
Published: 01 July 2008
Figure 28: (a) The Natih Formation in Wadi Mi’Aidin western flank (photo by Henk Droste). (b) Natih in Wadi Mi’Aidin eastern flank (photo by Peter Homewood). Both (a) and (b) show the Natih E cliff-forming member at the base of the section (lower cliff is 90 m thick), the weathered-back and scree
Image
Field “F” is located in the shallow subsurface of northern Oman. In Field “F” Albian to Turonian limestones of the Natih Formation are found at a shallow burial depth of a few hundred meters. Only a few tens of kilometers away in the jabals of the Adam Foothills and the Oman Mountains the Natih Formation can be found at outcrop (for details see published field guide of Homewood et al., 2008). The blue star shows location of outcrop section in Figure 6. Red stars denote the location of wells shown in Figure 7.
Published: 01 July 2013
the Natih Formation can be found at outcrop (for details see published field guide of Homewood et al., 2008 ). The blue star shows location of outcrop section in Figure 6 . Red stars denote the location of wells shown in Figure 7 .
Image
Cretaceous platform-to-basin sequence, Wadi Mi’Aidin (photos by Peter Homewood). (a) Jurassic section above Jurassic-Triassic unconformity at Mi’Aidin village; cliff is several hundred metres high. (b) From wadi bed to skyline: Raydah, Salil, Habshan, Lekhwair, Kharaib and Shu’aiba formations. Cliff is about 500 m high. This impressive Cretaceous sequence was laid down by progradation of the platform margin and then aggradation of the depositional system (see Figure 2).
Published: 01 July 2008
Figure 29: Cretaceous platform-to-basin sequence, Wadi Mi’Aidin (photos by Peter Homewood). (a) Jurassic section above Jurassic-Triassic unconformity at Mi’Aidin village; cliff is several hundred metres high. (b) From wadi bed to skyline: Raydah, Salil, Habshan, Lekhwair, Kharaib and Shu’aiba
Series: GSA Field Guide
Published: 25 September 2023
DOI: 10.1130/2023.0066(03)
EISBN: 9780813756660
... Homewood sandstone member of Ohiopyle State Park ( Skema, 2005) . In this guide, we will continue the tradition of calling the quartzose sandstone near the top of the Pottsville Formation Homewood ( Fig. 6 ). Sequence stratigraphy and depositional environments of the Homewood sandstone are discussed more...
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Journal Article
Journal: GeoArabia
Publisher: Gulf Petrolink
Published: 01 October 2010
GeoArabia (2010) 15 (4): 125–142.
... ; Grélaud et al., 2006 ; C. Grelaud, P. Razin and other authors as shown in Homewood et al., 2008 ; Adopted Interpretation in the present paper). The boundary between the Natih Formation and underlying Nahr Umr Formation was interpreted as a hiatus ( Hughes Clarke, 1988 ) and a regional...
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Journal Article
Journal: GeoArabia
Publisher: Gulf Petrolink
Published: 01 July 2013
GeoArabia (2013) 18 (3): 65–82.
... the Natih Formation can be found at outcrop (for details see published field guide of Homewood et al., 2008 ). The blue star shows location of outcrop section in Figure 6 . Red stars denote the location of wells shown in Figure 7 . ...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 April 2017
AAPG Bulletin (2017) 101 (4): 515–522.
... , 2002 , 2005 ; Grélaud et al., 2006 , 2010 ; Homewood et al., 2008 ; Al Balushi and Macquaker, 2011 ). During the field trip these different facies types, their vertical stacking patterns, and their lateral continuity and facies change are demonstrated. The outcrops of the Natih Formation...
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Journal Article
Journal: GeoArabia
Publisher: Gulf Petrolink
Published: 01 April 2011
GeoArabia (2011) 16 (2): 47–84.
... al., 2006; Homewood et al., 2008 ). These researchers typically subdivide the Natih Formation into three major depositional units: Sequences I, II and III, from base to top ( Figure 3 ). These sequences are regarded as larger-scale accommodation cycles that were subject to third-order (0.5 to 3.0 My...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 August 2011
Petroleum Geoscience (2011) 17 (3): 211–222.
... carbonate platform (Natih Formation, Late Cretaceous, Oman) . Journal of Sedimentary Research , 76 , 647 – 669 . Grélaud C. Razin P. Homewood P. 2010 . Channelized systems in an inner carbonate platform setting: Differentiation between incisions and tidal channels (Natih...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Published: 01 August 2011
Petroleum Geoscience (2011) 17 (3): 309–332.
... stratigraphic models have been built and three third order sequences (Sequence I to Sequence III) defined for the Natih Formation ( van Buchem et al . 1996 , 2002 b ; Schwab et al . 2005 ; Grélaud et al . 2006 ; Homewood et al . 2008 ). Sequence I corresponds more or less to Natih G, F, and E members...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 11 October 1995
AAPG Bulletin (1995) 79 (10): 1495–1514.
... of the Molasse basin of western Switzerland, in P. A. Allen and P. Homewood, eds., Foreland basins : International Association of Sedimentologists, Special Publication 8 , p. 199 – 217 . Houseknecht , D. W. , 1986 , Evolution from passive margin to foreland basin: the Atoka Formation of the Arkoma...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 July 1997
AAPG Bulletin (1997) 81 (7): 1185–1207.
.... The different seismic facies are assigned to the shoreface/fore-shore, nearshore, and offshore depositional systems. Mapping of the seismic facies on the seismic line reveals the presence of two prograding sequences (Luzern and St. Gallen formations) that are separated by an unconformity. The subsidence...
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Journal Article
Published: 24 April 2025
Journal of Sedimentary Research (2025)
... microtextures, which then facilitates the formation of micro-spar and micropores in the micritized sediments during subsequent diagenetic processes in the subsurface. Therefore, a better understanding of the origin and spatial distribution of micritized sediments is essential for accurately predicting...
Journal Article
Published: 01 April 1991
Journal of the Geological Society (1991) 148 (2): 207–210.
... the mid-Wenlock onwards, which resulted in a slowing of continental convergence. Further slowing occurred towards the end of the Silurian. 8 10 1990 23 10 1990 © Geological Society of London 1991 1991 Geological Society of London References Allen P. A. Homewood P...
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1989
Journal of the Geological Society (1989) 146 (3): 447–457.
... the extension active in the east from Late Pliocene times. References Allen P. A. Homewood P. Williams G. D. Allen P. A. Homewood P. Foreland basins: an introduction Foreland Basins 1986 8 3 12 Special Publication of the International Association of Sedimentologists...
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 September 2002
Geology (2002) 30 (9): 775–778.
... onto offshore fold crests are in the upper Pliocene Akchagyl Suite; this is taken as the age of initial fold formation ( Devlin et al., 1999 ). Onshore folding in the Apsheron region ( Fig. 1 ) may have begun during Productive Series deposition, based on stratal pinchouts ( Aliev, 1960 ). Folding...
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