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Ottawa Embayment

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Journal Article
Published: 06 June 2018
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2018) 55 (9): 1079–1102.
...Nkechi E. Oruche; George R. Dix; Sandra L. Kamo Three stages of carbonate-platform development are preserved in the upper Turinian – lower Chatfieldian succession of the Ottawa Group in the Ottawa Embayment and represent deposition along the Late Ordovician Taconic foreland interior of paleo...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2017
The Journal of Geology (2017) 125 (6): 659–680.
...R. A. Hardie; D. A. Schneider; J. I. Garver Abstract The Ottawa Embayment is an intracratonic rift basin in eastern North America that preserves a unique and eventful history through deep time. We report single-grain zircon and apatite (U-Th)/He and biotite 40 Ar/ 39 Ar data from samples collected...
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Journal Article
Published: 27 September 2012
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2012) 49 (10): 1177–1199.
...Odette Nehza; George R. Dix Abstract Stromatolites are abundant and widely distributed within two narrow stratigraphic intervals in Middle (Darriwilian) and Upper (lower Turinian) Ordovician strata of the Laurentian foreland interior in the Ottawa Embayment, eastern Ontario...
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Series: AAPG Memoir
Published: 01 January 2012
DOI: 10.1306/13331506M983505
EISBN: 9781629810201
... Abstract The Ottawa embayment forms an approximately 200-km (∼125-mi) structural indentation along the strike of the Precambrian Grenville province in central Canada. It follows the trace of a Neoproterozoic fault system that was reactivated episodically during the Phanerozoic. The Potsdam...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2011
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (2011) 59 (1): 7–26.
...George R. Dix; Christopher Jolicoeur Abstract Two intervals of Upper Ordovician organic-rich (gas-prone) source rocks are preserved in a regional fault block of approximately 1000 km 2 within the Ottawa Embayment (eastern Ontario). They bracket an apparent conformable mid-Katian (late Edenian...
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Journal Article
Published: 28 November 2006
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2006) 43 (9): 1367–1387.
...George R. Dix; Zuhor Al Rodhan Abstract The Carillon Formation underlies the Ottawa Embayment, a craton-interior extension of the regional Laurentian paleoshelf, defined today by the Ottawa–Bonnechere Graben. Facies within the embayment during the Middle Or dovician identify a mixed-sediment...
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Journal Article
Published: 12 February 2003
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2003) 40 (2): 135–148.
...Sajal Sharma; George R. Dix; J.F.V. Riva Abstract Comparison of litho-, bio-, and chemostratigraphy in two cores from the northeastern margin of the Michigan Basin (Manitoulin Island) and from within the Ottawa Embayment (eastern Ontario) identifies interbasinal differences of Late Ordovician...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2000
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2000) 36 (12): 2033–2050.
...O. Salad Hersi; G.R. Dix Abstract The Ottawa Embayment contains erosional remnants of a shallow-water carbonate platform (St. Lawrence Platform) of Late Ordovician (Caradocian) age. Stratigraphy of three Blackriveran formations — in ascending order, Pamelia, Lowville, and Chaumont — documents...
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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 August 1998
GSA Bulletin (1998) 110 (8): 1046–1059.
..., now defined by the Ottawa-Bonnechere Graben. Faulting was contemporaneous with initiation of the crustal forebulge within the distal, developing Taconic orogen. Mineralized, intrastratal, vuggy to local cavernous porosity composes a prominent second, more regional paleokarst. Dissolution followed...
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1998
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1998) 35 (6): 603–619.
... along an underlying, shallowly buried Proterozoic fault system, later manifest as the Ottawa-Bonnechere Graben. Dans la partie orientale de l'Ontario, la disconformité de l'Ordovicien moyen qui sépare les grès prédominants de la Formation de Rockcliffe d'avec la dolomie de la Formation de Carillon...
Journal Article
Published: 01 May 1997
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1997) 34 (5): 588–597.
...Osman Salad Hersi; George R. Dix Abstract The Hog's Back Formation, exposed in Ottawa, Ontario, is a new stratigraphic unit that disconformably overlies the Rockcliffe Formation and underlies, with apparent conformity, the Pamelia Formation of the Ottawa Group. The Hog's Back Formation is 14.3 m...
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The Ottawa Embayment was a semi-restricted embayment during Pamelia time, with a paleotopographic high (PTH) lying to the east in the Montréal area (southwestern Quebec). This hindered effective circulation between the embayment and southwestern Québec. At this time, the embayment was connected to the southern Appalachian Basin by the “Frontenac Seaway” (a). During “Lowville time,” the paleorestriction to the east was breached, establishing more regional continuity in facies (b).
Published: 01 March 2000
Fig. 13. The Ottawa Embayment was a semi-restricted embayment during Pamelia time, with a paleotopographic high (PTH) lying to the east in the Montréal area (southwestern Quebec). This hindered effective circulation between the embayment and southwestern Québec. At this time, the embayment
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Fig. 1.
Published: 06 June 2018
Fig. 1. Geological elements of the Ottawa Embayment (OE) and study localities. The embayment is bounded by Precambrian continental crust and is separated from the western Quebec Basin (nQB) by the Beauharnois–Oka arch, and northern limits of the Appalachian Basin (nAB) by the Frontenac Arch (FtA
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Fig. 7.
Published: 06 June 2018
Fig. 7. Geographic patterns of formation thickness in the Ottawa Embayment. Contours are in metres, with different intervals according to formation thickness. Sites 7 and 8 are illustrated in Appendix D . Circle colours: purple, complete formation; grey, not exposed; open, incomplete due
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Regional geology in and surrounding the Ottawa Embayment and Quebec Basin. The study sample site within the Potsdam Group is indicated. CLF, Chateaugay Lake Fault.
Published: 07 March 2017
Fig. 1. Regional geology in and surrounding the Ottawa Embayment and Quebec Basin. The study sample site within the Potsdam Group is indicated. CLF, Chateaugay Lake Fault.
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Bedrock geology of the Ottawa Embayment and adjacent areas, and locations of sections: outcrops, squares; cores, large circles; and wireline log transect (inset map) labeled gp and linked small circles. Geological map based on Oxley and Kay (1959), Baer et al. (1978), and Bleeker et al. (2011). Nomenclature of megasequences is from Derby et al. (2013). See Appendix for section coordinates and other information.
Published: 01 June 2013
Figure 2 Bedrock geology of the Ottawa Embayment and adjacent areas, and locations of sections: outcrops, squares ; cores, large circles ; and wireline log transect (inset map) labeled gp and linked small circles. Geological map based on Oxley and Kay (1959) , Baer et al. (1978
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Cambrian to Ordovician lithic succession in the Ottawa Embayment, and details of the Middle–Upper Ordovician lithic transitions from the Ottawa Embayment, through the Montreal region, into the Champlain Valley. Chronostratigraphic divisions are based on Ogg et al. (2008). Position and nomenclature of the Sauk and Tippecanoe I megasequences are from Dix and Al Rodhan (2006) and Derby et al. (2013), respectively. Abbreviations: Da, Darriwillian; Sa, Sandbian; Ka, Katian; T, Turinian; M, Maysvillian; R, Richmondian.
Published: 01 June 2013
Figure 3 Cambrian to Ordovician lithic succession in the Ottawa Embayment, and details of the Middle–Upper Ordovician lithic transitions from the Ottawa Embayment, through the Montreal region, into the Champlain Valley. Chronostratigraphic divisions are based on Ogg et al. (2008) . Position
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Fig. 2.
Published: 27 September 2012
Fig. 2. Lithostratigraphy of the Ottawa Embayment, with distribution, character, and lithology of microbial structures. Global and regional chronostratigraphic framework from Ogg et al. (2008) and local lithostratigraphic framework from Bleeker et al. (2011) . Cincc., Cincinnatian; Gp., Group
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General geology of the Ottawa Embayment (Ontario Geological Survey 1991; Ludden and Hynes 2000), showing location of cores and outcrops, the present-day Gloucester Fault (GF), and the likely offset axis of the Beauharnois Anticline.
Published: 28 November 2006
Fig. 3. General geology of the Ottawa Embayment ( Ontario Geological Survey 1991 ; Ludden and Hynes 2000 ), showing location of cores and outcrops, the present-day Gloucester Fault (GF), and the likely offset axis of the Beauharnois Anticline.
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Published: 01 April 2006
Table 1 Attributes of major lithofacies, Theresa Formation, Ottawa Embayment.