Characteristics of the Mid-Carboniferous Boundaryand Associated Coal-Bearing Rocks in the Appalachian Basin: Morgantown, West Virginia to Chattanooga
ISBN: 9781118667378
Platform/Publisher: WOL / American Geophysical Union
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Unlimited; Download: Unlimited
Subjects: Earth Space & Environmental Sciences; Earth Sciences;

Published by the American Geophysical Union as part of the Field Trip Guidebooks Series, Volume 352.

In the northern Appalachians, the boundary between the Mississippian and Pennsylvanian systems falls within a complex sedimentary sequence spread across a rapidly-subsiding depositional trough and an adjacent, more stable craton margin. Sediment source areas lie in a more-or-less continuous semicircle from southeast to north of the basin. In addition, the Upper Mississippian-Lower Pennsylvanian sequence is interrupted by extensive erosion related to epeirogenic upwarping of the region. Biostratigraphically, the systemic boundary is placed at the first occurrence of the floral form Neuropteris pocahontas (D. White) of floral zone 4 as defined by Read and Mamay (1964). However, because of the widespread disconformable nature of the contact, the basal Pennsylvanian flora is often younger.


W. E. Edmunds and J. R. Eggleston are the authors of Characteristics of the Mid-Carboniferous Boundary and Associated Coal-Bearing Rocks in the Appalachian Basin: Morgantown, West Virginia to Chattanooga, Tennessee, July 19 - 27, 1989, Volume T352, published by Wiley.

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