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Mauch Chunk Group

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Journal Article
Published: 01 May 1991
Journal of Paleontology (1991) 65 (3): 465–480.
Image
Stratigraphic column of the upper part of the Mauch Chunk Group showing typical gamma-ray log signature from the west-central part of Mercer County. Age constraints are based on the chart of Jones (1996).
Published: 01 February 2000
Figure 2 Stratigraphic column of the upper part of the Mauch Chunk Group showing typical gamma-ray log signature from the west-central part of Mercer County. Age constraints are based on the chart of Jones (1996) .
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 September 1979
AAPG Bulletin (1979) 63 (9): 1586.
...Mark W. Presley ABSTRACT Regional subsurface analysis of red beds of the Mauch Chunk Group (Upper Mississippian) in northern West Virginia, using oil and gas well logs and cuttings, suggests that deposition was in alluvial-plain environments grading basinward into mud flats. Thickest net sandstone...
Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2009
Journal of Paleontology (2009) 83 (6): 954–961.
...ROBERT L. PECK; JACK B. BAILEY; RICHARD J. HECK; NATHAN T. SCAIFF Abstract X-ray CT scans at two different energies of three articulated specimens of Spathelopsis oakvalensis n. sp., a bivalve from the Bluefield Formation of the Mauch Chunk Group (Mississippian, Chesterian) from southeastern West...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 December 1984
AAPG Bulletin (1984) 68 (12): 1931.
... Formation of the Mauch Chunk Group. This Ravencliff interval is bounded below by the Avis Limestone, a marine unit, and bounded above by a black, carbonaceous shale. Thickness of the interval ranges from 150 ft (45 m) in northwestern Wyoming County to 450 ft (137 m) in southeastern Mercer County...
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 2005
Journal of Paleontology (2005) 79 (5): 1019–1020.
... (2004) from the Maxville Limestone. Specimens of the new taxon were reported by Busanus (1974) as Conocardium spp. from the Chesterian Reynolds Limestone in northern West Virginia. Numerous specimens have been collected by RLP from five exposures of the Bluefield Formation, Mauch Chunk Group...
FIGURES
Series: GSA Field Guide
Published: 25 September 2023
DOI: 10.1130/2023.0066(05)
EISBN: 9780813756660
... are the Devonian Chemung or Foreknobs Formation; the Devonian Hampshire Formation; the Devonian–Mississippian Pocono (or Price) Formation; the Mississippian Greenbrier Group; the Mississippian Mauch Chunk Group; the Pennsylvanian Pottsville Group; and the Pennsylvanian Alleghany Formation. These formations...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 February 1968
AAPG Bulletin (1968) 52 (2): 246–263.
... are rounded with values from 0.40 to 0.60. All white sandstone samples are in the last group. Heavy mineral analyses .— Table III presents the heavy-mineral composition of the Mauch Chunk sandstones. Most of the heavy minerals are tourmaline and zircon. Many varieties of tourmaline are present...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 November 1943
AAPG Bulletin (1943) 27 (11): 1539–1542.
... shale and gray sandstone 870 365 Pottsville formation. White to gray sandstone and gray to black shale and silts tone Mississippian System 1,155 285 Mauch Chunk group. Red, gray, and green shale and light green sandstone and siltstone; gray fossiliferous limestone (“Little lime”) from 1,113...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 September 1974
AAPG Bulletin (1974) 58 (9): 1891–1892.
... and the Mississippian Mauch Chunk Formation. Out of 22 fluvial or possibly fluvial Appalachian stratigraphic units considered, the most promising ones for uranium exploration are the Devonian Hampshire and Catskill Formations from New York to Virginia, the Mississippian Mauch Chunk-Pennington Group from Pennsylvania...
Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2008
Journal of Paleontology (2008) 82 (6): 1182–1189.
... provides independent confirmation of the correlations based on sequence stratigraphy between the Appalachian and Illinois basins. Correlation of the overlying Reynolds Member of the Mauch Chunk Formation with the Glen Dean Formation of the Illinois Basin suggests a significant unconformity between...
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Image
Figure 9. The P80 seismic profile. (A) Uninterpreted, time-migrated profile. See Figure 5 for location. Abbreviated formations: Mmc—Mauch Chunk; Pp—Pottsville. (B) Interpretation of the P80 profile. See text for explanation. Marker bed in the Hamilton Group or Trimmers Rock Formation.
Published: 01 November 2004
Figure 9. The P80 seismic profile. (A) Uninterpreted, time-migrated profile. See Figure 5 for location. Abbreviated formations: Mmc—Mauch Chunk; Pp—Pottsville. (B) Interpretation of the P80 profile. See text for explanation. Marker bed in the Hamilton Group or Trimmers Rock Formation.
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1894
GSA Bulletin (1894) 6 (1): 305–320.
... in West Virginia, embraces the group of sandstones, conglomerates, sandy shales and coals lying between the green and red calcareous Mauch Chunk shales below, and the softer, more argillaceous terranes of the “Lower Productive Coal Measures” above. It is essentially a sandstone series, though it includes...
Journal Article
Published: 01 May 2011
The Journal of Geology (2011) 119 (3): 235–258.
... Virginia, exposes a bone bed in the middle Chesterian (Pendleian: Kammer and Lake 2001 ), Bickett Shale of the Bluefield Formation, Mauch Chunk Group (Hotton 1970 ; Godfrey 1988 ). The Bickett Shale here is red and green mottled siltstones and shales, with relict bedding, comparable with alluvial soils...
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Journal Article
Journal: Geosphere
Published: 19 October 2017
Geosphere (2017) 13 (6): 2206–2230.
... to this distal location as the Stony Gap Sandstone Member within the Pennington Formation (Group) (e.g., Thomas, 1959 ; Wilpolt and Marden, 1959 ). This sample location is within the area of overlap of the Mauch Chunk–Pottsville clastic wedge with the Pennington-Lee clastic wedge, leaving the provenance...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 April 1964
AAPG Bulletin (1964) 48 (4): 465–486.
... only a few feet in some places along the Ohio River to more than 1,000 feet in extreme southern West Virginia. Fig. 1. —Index map. The upper boundary of the Greenbrier limestone is the base of the Bluefield Group of the Mauch Chunk Series. The lower limit of the Greenbrier...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 February 2000
AAPG Bulletin (2000) 84 (2): 210–233.
...Figure 2 Stratigraphic column of the upper part of the Mauch Chunk Group showing typical gamma-ray log signature from the west-central part of Mercer County. Age constraints are based on the chart of Jones (1996) . ...
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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 September 2000
GSA Bulletin (2000) 112 (9): 1315–1341.
... Zone IV and Westphalian D ( Fig. 18 ). Thus, we place the Hurley Creek Formation in Figure 18 straddling the Westphalian C/D boundary. We concur with the position of the Prince Edward Island Group within the Stephanian. DiVenere and Opdyke (1991a) sampled the upper part of the Mauch Chunk...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 May 1927
AAPG Bulletin (1927) 11 (5): 477–492.
... sandstone-conglomerate and coals, of Pennsylvanian age; the Mauch Chunk shales, sands, and limestones, the St. Louis limestone, and the Waverly shales and sandstones, of the Mississippian; the Chattanooga black shale and Corniferous limestone of the Devonian; the Niagara shales and limestone of the Silurian...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 June 1927
AAPG Bulletin (1927) 11 (6): 581–599.
... mentioned. Mauch Chunk series .—Separated from the Pottsville by an unconformity of large proportions, the Mauch Chunk series of the Mississippian comes next in descending order. Locally this group consists of red and green shales and green, micaceous, flaggy, and lenticular sandstones...
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