Tripping from the Fall Line: Field Excursions for the GSA Annual Meeting, Baltimore, 2015

Prepared in conjunction with the 2015 GSA Annual Meeting in Baltimore, Maryland, this volume contains guides to field trips in this historic region. Emanating from the Fall Line city of Baltimore, these trips reflect the diversity of geological features in the mid-Atlantic region including the Piedmont, Appalachian Mountains, and Coastal Plain, and the importance of geology on the development and construction of the Baltimore-Washington, D.C., metropolitan area. Trips to the core of the Appalachian orogen concern themselves with the tectonic and metamorphic history, early Paleozoic carbonate platform development, Devonian paleoclimate, and coal-mine fire hazards. Excursions to the Coastal Plain examine various aspects of Cenozoic stratigraphy, structure, barrier island formation, and wetland and ecosystem development. A variety of trips also explore urban geology, including building and monument stones of Baltimore and Washington, D.C., urban hydrogeology, and Civil War battlefield geology.
The tectono-thermal evolution of the central Appalachian Orogen: Accretion of a peri-Gondwanan(?) Ordovician arc
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Published:January 01, 2015
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CiteCitation
Howell Bosbyshell, LeeAnn Srogi, Gale C. Blackmer, William S. Schenck, Ryan Mathur, Victor Valencia, 2015. "The tectono-thermal evolution of the central Appalachian Orogen: Accretion of a peri-Gondwanan(?) Ordovician arc", Tripping from the Fall Line: Field Excursions for the GSA Annual Meeting, Baltimore, 2015, David K. Brezinski, Jeffrey P. Halka, Richard A. Ortt, Jr.
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Abstract
Recent detrital zircon results in both the central Appalachians and New England demonstrate that middle Ordovician, ‘Taconic’ island arcs, long considered to be peri-Laurentian, are built upon or associated with rock of Gondwanan affinity. This trip will visit granulite-facies orthogneiss of the Wilmington Complex, a 475–480 Ma magmatic arc, and the adjacent Wissahickon Formation. The Wissahickon Formation is intruded by and interlayered with meta-igneous rocks with arc affinity and contains detrital zircon populations characteristic of both Gondwanan and Laurentian sources. The Chester Park Gneiss, now known to have detrital zircon age spectra which match the Gondwana-derived Moretown Terrane in New England, is also featured. The trip will examine contact relationships between arc and Laurentian rocks and a newly discovered location where metapelitic rock contains garnet with crystallographically oriented rutile inclusions, possibly indicative of ultrahigh-temperature or ultrahigh-pressure metamorphism. We will discuss similarities between rocks of the central and northern Appalachians and evaluate a new model wherein the central Appalachian rocks were originally part of the Taconic arc in New England and were translated by strike-slip deformation to their present position in the orogen.
- accretion
- amphibolites
- Appalachian Phase
- Appalachians
- Central Appalachians
- chemical composition
- Delaware
- Delaware County Pennsylvania
- dikes
- field trips
- geochemistry
- Gondwana
- intrusions
- lower Paleozoic
- metamorphic rocks
- metamorphism
- nesosilicates
- New Castle County Delaware
- North America
- Ordovician
- orthosilicates
- paleogeography
- Paleozoic
- Pennsylvania
- Permian
- road log
- silicates
- Taconic Orogeny
- tectonics
- United States
- Wilmington Complex
- Wissahickon Formation
- zircon
- zircon group