Friday, 30 July 2021

What was Alice E. Wilson Thinking When She Renamed the Theresa Formation as the March Formation for the rocks of the Ottawa Embayment?

 
There are two ways of interpreting the title of this blog post.  I have adopted the kinder interpretation.  I am writing this posting to explain her reasoning and because I want to put on record a number of references that have been overlooked.  I am not asking the question “How could she have done that?”

Many that are familiar with the March/Theresa naming controversy will probably be surprised that I used the word ‘renamed’ in the title of this blog posting.  To understand why I used the word ‘renamed’ in the title, and to understand why the particular rock formation of interest was for fifty years called the March Formation in Ontario and more recently has been called the Theresa Formation in Ontario, it helps to know a bit of the history.  

Logan (1863) of the  Geological  Survey  of Canada  used the term “beds of passage” for the rock exposed in Ontario and Quebec that we now call March/Theresa Formation.   For example he referred to the “the beds of passage between the Potsdam and the succeeding formation,” the Calciferous.  Logan also reported finding the gastropod fossil Ophileta compacta in the passage beds.  Logan considered the beds of passage to be part of the Potsdam Group of sandstones and conglomerate.  I cannot tell if he mapped them as part of the Potsdam, as the scale on Logan’s maps (e.g., Logan, 1865, Map 53,  1:7 920 000 ) defeats one being able to tell whether he mapped the passage beds as part of the Potsdam or the Calciferous.
            
The ‘beds of passage’ were recognized and reported as the passage beds or ‘transition beds’ in the earlier mapping of eastern Ontario in the latter half of the 1800's and early part of the twentieth century by the Geological Survey of Canada.  For example,  Ells (1901) in his report on the Geology of the Ottawa area mentioned “There is no break between the Calciferous which is for the most part a dolomitic limestone, and the Potsdam which is a sandstone. There are from twenty to thirty feet of transition beds in which the sandy part of the latter becomes more calcareous and it is from this portion that most of the fossils which have been described as Potsdam have been obtained.” Ells  (1903) when reporting on rocks  in the Kingston district, Ontario mentions that the Potsdam sandstones “consist for the most part of white quartzite, and these sandstones graduate upward without break into strata which become calcareous till the rock finally passes into a dolomitic limestone which constitutes the Calciferous formation.  Between the sandstone proper and the dolomite there are certain layers known as the transition beds which range in thickness from five  to forty feet, and these are often highly fossiliferous... “.  

Ells mapped the transition beds sometimes as part of the Potsdam and sometimes as part of the Calciferous.  For the area northeast of Perth, Ontario – north towards Carleton Place, and east to Smiths Falls–  Ells (1901, Perth Sheet, Map 789) mapped some rock as Potsdam Sandstone and some rock as Calciferous,  that the Ontario Geological Survey later  mapped as March Formation (Williams and Wolf, 1984, Map P2714).  In the marginal notes Ells stated “The transition beds between the [Potsdam] sandstone and the overlying Calciferous dolomites extend upward in places for a thickness of thirty feet, and render the exact boundaries of the two formations difficult to determine.  They have however been indicated as closely as possible...”.  

In an Appendix to a report by Ells,  Ami (1905) listed and describing fossils from the Potsdam, Beekmantown  (Calciferous), etc. formations on the Perth Sheet. In his report  Ami (1905,  p.  82J, 83J) treated  the Passage Beds as a separate formation between the Potsdam and Beekmantown, and may have been the first to do so for Canada.  Ami was reporting on a fossil Gastropod and commented that “The strata holding these may fairly be described as passage beds between the Potsdam sandstone and the next overlying series: the Beekmantown formations.”

Cushing (1908) proposed the term Theresa Formation  for the transition beds exposed  at  Theresa, New York.  Cushing commented “The Potsdam grades upward into a formation which consists of sandy dolomite layers and beds of weak brown sandstone which are mostly near  the base and are quite like the upper beds of the Potsdam. The line between the two formations is drawn at the base of the first dolomite layer, but in all probability this is not a constant horizon over the district. The name given to the formation is mainly intended for local use and the necessity for its introduction arises from present doubt as to the exact equivalent of the formation elsewhere in the region. When fresh the dolomite is a hard and tough, bluish gray rock, which, however, quickly weathers to iron-stained sandy crusts. All the beds are somewhat sandy.”

The term Theresa was quickly picked up for the United States. Grabau (1909) mentions that Cushing found “in the Theresa quadrangle  from 115 to 215 feet of strata beneath the Black River, and resting disconformably upon the Lower Beekmantown (Theresa formation), which, with its basal sandstone (called Potsdam by Cushing), has a maximum thickness of 140 feet.”  Professor Grabau also made the point that as the Potsdam is “a transgressive overlapping series of strata deposited by a transgressing sea, the basal sand member would naturally rise in the series in the direction of transgression and overlap, and that hence a basal sand is not everywhere of the same age.”  
 
One year later in a New York State Museum Bulletin report on the Geology of the Thousand Islands, Cushing et al. (1910, pages  65-66), when discussing the Theresa Formation commented that “The horizon  seemed the same as, and the beds identical with beds which directly overlie the Potsdam sandstone all across northern New York, a length of outcrop of 150 miles, and which have heretofore been called "passage beds" between  the Potsdam and the Beekmantown, the Beekmantown being the  formation which overlies the Potsdam for much of this distance. ...   It is likely, however, to prove useful as a name for the considerable  thickness of alternating beds everywhere immediately overlie the Potsdam sandstone in northern New York, and which should be mapped  separately.”  Cushing et al. also commented (1910, pages  66-67) that  “According to Ells the Theresa formation outcrops on Howe island [east of Kingston],  and on the  Canadian mainland to a point midway between Gananoque and Kingston. [Royal Soc. Can. Trans., ser. 2, v. 9, § 4, p. 97-108.]   In the district about Kingston, as seen by us in 1908 under Dr Ami's guidance, the Potsdam is certainly  present, though no Theresa was seen.”

The first reports of the Geological Survey of Canada to reference the Theresa formation in New York State were by Johnston (1909, 1911).  On mapping the Pamelia beds on the Simcoe Sheet, Ontario, he compared  the Pamelia beds in Ontario with those in New York State, and mentions (1909, page 99) that in New York below the Pamelia “lies the Theresa formation, supposed to be equivalent to the lower portion of the Beekmantown (Calciferous), and the Potsdam sandstone forms the  base of the series ” and (1911, page 190) “In New York State the limestones of the Black River group pass downward into the Pamelia limestone of Upper Stones River age, which in turn is underlain by the Theresa formation, the  upper member of  which is of early Beekmantown (Calciferous) age.”  Neither the Calciferous (Beekmantown) nor Potsdam were present on the Simcoe Sheet.

Willis (1912) may have applied the Theresa Formation to rocks in Ontario and Quebec.   Under his supervision the United States Geological Survey in cooperation with the Geological Survey of Canada and the Instituto Geologico de Mexico compiled an Index to the Stratigraphy of North America, with an accompanying Geologic Map of North America.  His map unit 18 includes  the
Lower Cambrian  to Lower Ordovician (Beekmantown), inclusive.  In the text of the publication he reviews Cushing’s references to the Theresa Formation in New York State.   He also discusses the geology of the St. Lawrence Valley, commenting (page 196) “The distribution of the Ordovician, exclusive of the Beekmantown ("Calciferous"), in the St. Lawrence Valley as here mapped is taken from the map sheets of Ontario and Quebec. ... . The Pamelia limestone  and the underlying but unconformable "Theresa formation" have also been traced in the latest work (1908).[a]” His footnote ‘[a]’ references “Ami, H. M. , personal communication, Sept. 1908.”   H. M. Ami was a paleontologist with the Geological Survey of Canada.

Raymond (1912 and 1913a) was the first to clearly use Theresa for the formation in Canada.  Raymond (1912) when discussing the lower part of the Beekmantown rocks at Brockville and Smiths Falls assigned the name Theresa to the formation, commenting “In the vicinity of Brockville and Smiths  Falls the Beekmantown is divisible into two formations. The older formation has two members. The lower part is a rather soft calcareous sandstone, usually thin-bedded. In places, however, the cement is siliceous and the beds very hard ...  Fossils are there fairly common, and the presence of Ophileta complanata, and a gastropod very like Pleurotomaria canadensis indicate the Beekmantown age of the formation. .... The upper member of this formation is a thin-bedded bluish dolomite which weathers to a rusty yellow colour. These beds contain obscure gastropods and crinoidal remains. At Smiths Falls the thickness of the whole formation is above 70 feet, ... This formation appears also in New York state, in the vicinity of Clayton, and has been given the name Theresa by Prof. Gushing. This name may be adopted in Canada also. Above the thin-bedded dolomite of the Theresa there are heavier-bedded limestones and dolomites with a rather large fauna ... found also in the lower part of the Beekmantown section in the Champlain valley ..  It will, however, be necessary to give a new formational name to these beds, and Beauharnois may be suggested.”

Raymond (1913a, p. 139) in a field trip guide to the ‘Ordovician of Montreal and Ottawa’ used the term Theresa Formation for the Ordovician  passage beds for outcrops in Ontario.  He stated: “Theresa. — In some parts of the Ottawa valley the oldest beds of the Beekmantown are composed of reworked Potsdam sand, with a calcareous cement. These beds are therefore softer and weaker than the Potsdam beds.  They contain fossils at several localities, the more common of which are Ophileta complanata and Pleurotomaria canadensis. The upper part of the Theresa is a thin-bedded, gray dolomite, with the same fossils. The  Theresa is absent from the section at Montreal, and is thin near Ottawa, but thickens southward, toward Smiths Falls and Brockville.”
            
It is worth noting that Raymond’s  (1913a) paper is usually cited as the first to divide the Beekmantown Group of the Montreal area into two formations, namely the Theresa  and the overlying Beauharnois.  In fact for the Theresa he was mainly commenting on the Ordovician passage beds that outcrop near Ottawa, Smith Falls and Brockville, and noted that the Theresa is absent at Montreal.  In addition,  it was Raymond’s second paper mentioning the Theresa.

Raymond (1913b)  used “Beauharnois formation, (Beekmantown)” to refer to a formation where specimens of a trilobite could be found on the Island of Montreal.
    
Kindle (1916), in a report on the Ordovician limestones in the vicinity of Kingston, Ontario, commented “Prof. H. P. Cushing visited this area during the progress of his mapping of
the formations on the New York side of the St. Lawrence and has included in his report a reference to the Kingston section. In a preliminary paper on this work Cushing described two new formations, the Pamelia limestone and Theresa dolomite from near the base of the Ordovician section. In the Kingston district Cushing found no evidence of the presence of the Theresa.”

Parks (1922), in a paper discussing the development of stratigraphy and  paleontology in Canada, mentions that Raymond “subdivided the Beekmantown into Theresa and Beauharnois; established the upper age of the Chazy of Ontario and Quebec , calling it the "Aylmer" formation, and subdivided the Black River into Pamelia, Lowville and Black River.”'

Cole (1923, page 11) in a report on Silica in Canada, mentions that “Directly overlying the Potsdam sandstone formation, beds are to be found, in some localities, composed mostly of grains of quartz cemented by a calcareous bond, and placed in the Theresa formation of Beekmantown age.  The beds are considered to be composed of material derived from the Potsdam formation, and in some cases are hard to differentiate from beds of true Potsdam age.”

Wright (1923) in report on the geology of the  Brockville-Mallorytown area, Ontario for the Geological Survey of Canada, includes a Paleozoic Section comparing the rocks of the Brockville-Mallorytown map area with those across the St. Lawrence in the Ogdensburg area, an area mapped by Cushing.   In that Paleozoic section where his description is “Lens-shaped bed of bluish grey dolomite limestone. Very hard, massive, light grey sandstone.  Irregular-bedded, rubbly weathering, calcareous sandy material” Wright places it in the Potsdam for Canada and under Theresa for the USA.  In the text of his report he notes that “Cushing, discussing the area directly across the river, has placed the Potsdam and Theresa formations in the Cambrian...”.

In an unpublished Master of Science thesis correlating the Ordovician in Canada, Phillpotts (1928) adopted Theresa for a rock formation in Eastern Ontario and Beauharnois for a formation in Montreal and in Eastern Ontario, as the parts of the Beekmantown, referencing Raymond (1913a) in his bibliography.

Maddox (1930) in a report by the GSC on the thicknesses of the Ordovician formations in Ontario and Quebec commented “No attempt has been made to subdivide the Beekmantown into the Theresa and the Beauharnois, the lower limit of the Beekmantown being arbitrarily assumed to be where the lowest bed of dolomite occurs in the sandstone.”

Morley E. Wilson (1931a) used the term “Theresa (Transition Beds)” to identify the lower part of the Beekmantown in a table of  Palaeozoic strata of the Ottawa map-area.   Morley E. Wilson (1931b, c) when describing ripple marks in sandstone beds at a quarry near Perth, Ontario, noted that the beds were “formerly known as ‘Transition Beds’, but now called Theresa in New York state.”  He commented (1931b, page 26): “The Potsdam sandstone is succeeded by the sandy dolomitic limestone or limey dolomite of the Beekmantown, the change from the Potsdam to the Beekmantown taking place in most places transitionally, beds of sandstone up to four feet thick alternating with beds of sandy dolomitic limestone. These alternating beds formerly known as "Transition Beds", but now called Theresa in New York state, are usually thin, the maximum thickness so far observed by the writer being 30 to 40 feet in the vicinity of Smiths Falls.”  

In an unpublished Master of Science thesis, Wykes (1931), who had assisted Dr. Morley E. Wilson in the field in 1930,  described the Paleozoic Formations of the Perth Sheet, Ontario as (a) a basal conglomerate (b) Potsdam sandstone,  (c ) Transitional or Theresa beds - sandy dolomites or limestones; (d) Beekmantown Dolomitic limestone.

Parks (1931) followed Raymond in dividing the Beekmantown group in Quebec into the  Theresa and Beauharnois formations.    

Alice E. Wilson made widespread use of the term Theresa for these beds in three papers: (1932a) in an unpublished internal GSC  report on the Palaeozoic rocks of the Thurso map (Quebec and Ontario),   (1932b) in  a Palaeontological Note in the Canadian Field-Naturalist, and (1936) in a paper summarizing of the Ordovician of Ontario and western Quebec and New York,  

 In the unpublished report Wilson (1932a, Page 5, 14) comments  “The Theresa, the sandy phase at the base of the Beekmantown, does not in this region add any information to the question of an unconformity between the Potsdam and the Beekmantown.  The Theresa passes imperceptibly into the Upper beds of the Beekmantown, evidence of a deepening sea.” ... [The Theresa] “has everywhere been recognized in the earlier mapping of eastern Ontario by Ells who designated it as "the passage beds." In New York State the member has been recognized in several quadrangles.  In the Thousand Island region and in the Ogdensburg quadrangle, Cushing did not distinguish any unconformity between the Theresa and the underlying sandstone.”
    
Alice E. Wilson (1932b) in her Palaeontological Note in the Canadian Field-Naturalist commented on outcrops of Theresa formation rock near Westport, Ontario, at Thurso, Quebec and at Montreal, stating  “Cushing's original intention was to consider the Theresa as "passage beds" between the Potsdam and the undoubted Beekmantown. ... The fossils found in these "passage beds" in the Westport and Perth sheets are undoubtedly Beekmantown in age. ...  [T]here are two possibilities, the existence or the non-existence of an unconformity separating the  Potsdam and the Theresa of the Beekmantown age. ... The change in the chemical content of the sediments of the Potsdam and the Beekmantown seas is the record of a change in material brought to the ocean. It must have preceded the change  in deposition. It would seem logical to consider that the change in chemical composition would correspond with the period of erosion elsewhere. Hence the logical place to draw the line in the rocks deposited would be below the first appearance of a change in deposition, that is, the first appearance of dolomite in the matrix of the sand, which would be below these basal Theresa beds.”

Alice E. Wilson (1936) in a paper with the title ‘A Synopsis of the Ordovician of Ontario and western Quebec and the related succession in New York’ commented: “ In eastern Ontario and western Quebec there are two phases of the Beekmantown– the Theresa, or "passage beds," and the overlying calcareous or dolomitic beds, to which Raymond has given the name of Beauharnois.      THERESA - The Theresa  is a thin formation of alternating dolomites and loosely cemented sandstones. Raymond (1913) considers the sandy phase to be the reworked Potsdam sandstone with a calcareous cement. The lower dolomite layers contain considerable sand and grit, but higher up they become a purer, tough, bluish grey dolomite, weathering rusty in spots. These beds pass imperceptibly into the purer dolomite of the upper  Beekmantown.   The Theresa is very thin in the Ottawa valley, but increases in thickness at Smiths Falls and Brockville. ...   The Theresa was first described in New York state, the type locality being at Theresa, Jefferson county, New York, where the division attains a maximum thickness of 80 feet.   ... To the lower member Cushing  (1908) gave the name "Theresa." He considered the Theresa in its most  easterly phase as "passage" beds between the Potsdam sandstone and the overlying Beekmantown.   ... In Ontario Logan recognized these beds as a separate phase and throughout the early Canadian literature they are spoken of as the "passage beds," and as lying above the Potsdam and below the typical Beekmantown.”
    
Notwithstanding her earlier use of the Theresa, Alice E. Wilson (1937b) in a paper describing erosional intervals in the Ottawa area provided a table of formations for the Ottawa area in which she included the March formation above the Nepean formation, without describing or defining the March formation.   Alice E. Wilson (1937a) in an unpublished report of the Geological Survey of Canada on the Geology of the Paleozoic Rocks of the Ottawa Area, signaled her change in thinking, naming the March and Nepean formations.  She commented “It has been the custom in the past to correlate the Palaeozoic rocks of Ontario and Quebec  with those of, New York State and to employ the formational names used in New York. It is believed that in some instances this has clouded the true interpretation.... The word Beekmantown, for instance, sometimes signifies the age in which certain rocks were deposited or sometimes signifies indiscriminately two or three phases of rocks deposited at different period of time. ... The boundary between the Nepean and March formations is stratigraphically slightly higher than the division formerly drawn between the Potsdam and the Theresa. ... First, the two formations may have been deposited by two distinct marine invasions. The contact of the Nepean with the March formation does not exactly coincide with the contact between the Potsdam and Theresa of New York. Raymond’s interpretation that the Theresa is reworked Potsdam, while not stating it assumes an erosional interval after the deposition of the Potsdam and before that of the Theresa sea. The incoming sea would rework the upper sand of the Potsdam and redeposit it. The upper layers of sandstone, then, would be the deposition of the later invasion. Evidences of such erosion might well be very obscure. It is practically impossible to find the exact line between sand laid upon sand. The existence or non-existence of an unconformity between the Potsdam and the Theresa in New York has been discussed by Cushing and others. The New York Geological  Survey considers both Potsdam and Theresa as divisions of Upper Cambrian time.  In Ontario all evidence corroborates Raymond's interpretation that at least the upper beds are of Ordovician age. But the assumption of an erosional  contact is not the only interpretation possible.”

Further, Alice E. Wilson ( 1938a,  1938b, 1940a, 1940b, 1941a, 1941b, 1941c, 1942, 1946a)  in a series of nine maps on  the Paleozoic Geology of Eastern Ontario and Western Quebec,  published between 1938 and 1946 by the Geological Survey of Canada, used the term ‘March Formation’ instead of the Theresa formation for one of her mapped units.  The  marginal notes to her maps contained a description of the March Formation, with the descriptions on the nine maps being nearly identical.  This is her description from her (1938b) Map 414a entitled ‘Ottawa Sheet  (West Half) Carleton and Hull Counties, Ontario and Quebec’: “The MARCH (3) is a thin formation of Lower Ordovician age lying conformably upon the Nepean. It is composed of thick beds of interstratified grey sandstones with a calcareous cement and a sandy blue-grey dolomites, both weathering a rusty brown.  Transitional between the Nepean below and the Oxford above, it has been defined as a formation because its characteristic features are persistent throughout the region.  It is a water bearing horizon. The contact with the Nepean is placed at the first dolomitic layer, but it is difficult to locate in many places because the resistant sandstone layers are often widely exposed and are very like those of the upper Nepean. The upper layers grade into the Oxford. It has an estimated thickness of 25 to 30 feet.”  Map 557a, Map 558a and Map 662a contain the statement that the March  “grades into the overlying Oxford and for this reason is considered to be of Beekmantown age.”  Map 710a adds  the sentence “The few fossils in it indicate a Beekmantown age” while Map  852a adds  the sentence “The formation contains fossils of Beekmantown age.”
            
The following map shows Geologic maps where the Paleozoic Geology was mapped by Alice E. Wilson.   Eight of the maps mentioned in the previous paragraph are shown, plus two additional maps where Alice E. Wilson was  not the sole author.  It is worth noting that four of Alice E. Wilson’s maps cover parts of the Province of Quebec and that the geologists in Quebec never adopted March as the name of the formation (other than in an unpublished Ph.D. thesis at McGill University by Dean (1962) in which he used March for the basal formation of the Beekmantown  and Beauharnois for the upper formation). .

Alice E. Wilson ( 1946b) in her Memoir on the ‘Geology  of  the  Ottawa - St. Lawrence Lowland, Ontario and Quebec” defined the March formation, naming it  for March Township (south of Ottawa) where it outcrops.  She noted (1948, page 16-17 ) that “The Nepean sandstone, then, may or may not have been deposited at the same time as the Potsdam of New York, and within the Nepean itself there is no definite evidence that it is of Upper Cambrian age.  The possibility is recognized, but the probability  is that the sandstone was deposited in earliest Ordovician time as the basal phase of an advancing sea. The March formation, with a few of the upper sandstone layers of the Nepean sandstone, was correlated by Raymond (1913, p. 139) with the Theresa of New York, and considered by him to be the base of the Ordovician in eastern Ontario. The position of the New York Theresa has been redefined, and the name is now restricted to an Upper Cambrian formation having its type locality in New York. Fossils indicate that the March is of Ordovician age.”   As she believed  that her  Nepean and March in the Ottawa - St. Lawrence Lowland, Ontario and Quebec,  were Ordovician in age  while the Potsdam and Theresa in New York were Cambrian, she rejected the name Theresa for the rock unit she had mapped in Ontario and Quebec.

In Eastern Ontario the designation March Formation was used for these beds from 1948 to at least 1991, relying on Alice E. Wilson’s (1946) memoir.  For example [1] Keith (1949) in an Ontario Department of Mines publication on sandstone as a  source of silica sands in southeastern Ontario employed the term March Formation for that part of the Beekmantown overlying the Potsdam; [2]  Wynne-Edwards (1967) in his memoir on the  Westport map Area, Ontario comments “The March Formation represents a transitional unit between the sandstone of the Nepean and the overlying Oxford dolomite (Wilson, 1946).” [3] Wolf and Dalrymple (1985) in a paper discussing the  Covey Hill Formation and Nepean Formation mention “the overlying March Formation and its New York equivalent.”  Interesting, Greggs and  Gorman (1976) in a publication on the  Geology of the Thousand Islands (Ontario side), describe the features of the March formation, but mention that  “the March Formation is the exact lithological and stratigraphical equivalent to the Theresa [of New York].”  In the early 1980s the Ontario Geological Survey re-mapped the Paleozoic rocks of Eastern Ontario (e.g.,  Williams  and Wolf, 1984a, Map P. 2724, Paleozoic Geology of the Perth Area; Williams  and Wolf, 1984b, Map P. 2725, Paleozoic Geology of the Carleton Place Area), employing exclusively March Formation.   The name March Formation is still in use by the Ontario Geological Survey (e.g., Béland Otis (2017,  figure 22.1; 2018, Figure 22.1, both generalized bedrock geology maps).
           
Greggs and Gorman (1976) make an interesting observation that may help explain where Alice E. Wilson went wrong. They comment : “A further confusion in determining the age of the Nepean Formation developed as a consequence of the pronounced similarity between the upper March and the Nepean sandstones. This miscorrelation of the March and Nepean led Keith (1949, p. 8) and Kirwan (1963, p. 109) to conclude that the "Nepean (Potsdam)" in the areas immediately to the east of the Frontenac Axis was of Beekmantown age (Lower Ordovician). This age determination was based on the discovery by Keith (1949) of several species of Lower Ordovician gastropods in outcrops mapped as Potsdam by Baker (1922) and Wright (1923), and later by Wilson (1938, 1946) as Nepean. The outcrop yielding the Ordovician gastropods was actually upper March. The very great lithological similarity of the Nepean and upper March sandstones makes the error of age determination understandable.”   Baker and Wright were always going to map the transition beds as Potsdam.  Alice E. Wilson misidentifying beds as Nepean rather than her March, would have affected her analysis.

The best description of the naming controversy can be found in Bernstein (1992) and Salad Hersi et al. (2002, 2003).   Bernstein (1992, page 2683) comments “Contrary to established procedure (see Schenck and Miiller 194I), [Alice E. ]Wilson, like many of her contemporaries, regarded formations as time-restricted units. Thus, despite considering the Nepean and March correlatives of the Potsdam and Theresa in Quebec and New York State, she retained the terms Nepean and March because the Potsdam and Theresa formations were regarded as Cambrian in age at their type localities.”    Bernstein (1992) rejected March and suggested that Theresa be used in Ontario and Quebec.    There seems to be general agreement that Alice E. Wilson applied the wrong criteria to name the Nepean and March Formations.  For example, Professor George Dix (2021, personal communication) has commented  “Even in the 1930/40s when Wilson recognized that the “Nepean” and “March” strata were younger, the international stratigraphic code did not allow for age as a reason for establishing new formation names.”     Another criticism of Wilson would be that from Logan to Ells to Raymond the field officers of the Geological Survey of Canada viewed the Potsdam sandstone in Ontario and Quebec as an extension of the Potsdam sandstone in Upper New York State, and viewed the overlying beds as correlating with the overlying beds in New York State, and all of Logan, Ells and Raymond had looked at the rocks in Ontario, Quebec and New York State.

Since Bernstein (1992) the trend in Ontario has been to replace March with Theresa, as the same formation is believed to be present in New York, Ontario and Quebec, and the name Theresa was in use first.  Before COVID struck Catherine Béland Otis (2017, 2018, 2019)  of the Ontario Geological Survey  was mapping  the Paleozoic geology of eastern Ontario.   In each of her reports she has provided a figure with the competing terminologies for Paleozoic strata  in eastern Ontario, with her left column providing  the nomenclature currently used by the Ontario Geological Survey, while the column on the right is the nomenclature proposed in more recent publications.  I expect that she will recommend replacing March with Theresa, as Professor Dix at Carleton University, Professor Arnott at the University of Ottawa, and their students, use Theresa in their publications.   In addition Béland Otis (2017) commented that “recent academic studies suggest that the geological history of the Ottawa Embayment is closely related to that of adjacent jurisdictions, such as Quebec and northern New York....; therefore, any revision of the stratigraphic nomenclature for eastern Ontario should take these similarities into account (per Articles 7c and 7e of NACSN (2005)).”

In the past twenty years most of the articles on the March/Theresa deal with whether the March/Theresa conformably or unconformably overlies the Potsdam Group (for the recent participants to the debate see the papers mentioned in the References and Suggested Reading to my June 1, 2021 blog posting) and where to place the boundary.  Salad Hersi et al. (2002, page 422) set out the background for the debate:  “Wilson (1937) hypothesized that the Cambrian–Ordovician Nepean Formation in the Ottawa  region  possibly  contains  an  eroded  interval  at  the Cambro–Ordovician boundary.    In a later and widely acknowledged  publication,  Wilson  (1946)  documented  the  Nepean–March contact as transitional, and like Cushing (1908), placed it at the base of the first dolomitic or calcareous bed.”  The opposing views of the participants to the debate cannot easily be summarized or reconciled.  Lowe et al. (2019) take the position that “In the southeastern Ottawa graben, the change from clastic (Keeseville) to carbonate-clastic strata (Theresa) is conformable and gradational, whereas in the west it is sharp and conformable, but locally unconformable in areas on the hanging-wall blocks of regional normal faults (e.g., the Gloucester and Ste. Justine faults) throughout the northern Ottawa graben”.   Professor Dix, Professor Salad Hersi and Ed Landing are not in  agreement with that sentence, with their papers supporting a  disconformable Potsdam–Theresa  contact  at Ottawa and a regional post-Potsdam erosional surface (see Dix et al., 2004; Salad Hersi et  al.  2002 a,  2002 b; Landing, 2007; Landing et al., 2019).      Béland Otis (2018, page 22-6) commented that “In the Ottawa area, the lower contact of the Beekmantown Group with the underlying Potsdam Group seems conformable and gradational. As observed in both cores, the lower contact of the March (Theresa) Formation with the Nepean (Keeseville) Formation is interbedded over a few metres. Exact definition of this contact is therefore somewhat arbitrary,...”.

Williams (1991), among others,  has noted that “Quartz sandstones of the March Formation are lithologically similar to those of the underlying Nepean Formation. ... Dolostones of the March Formation are lithologically similar to those of the overlying Oxford Formation.”   As a consequence, mapping the location of the  upper and lower boundaries is often not free from doubt. In my June 4th blog posting I mention  the  outcrop at Phillipsville, Ontario.  Some have mapped  it as Nepean; others, as March/Theresa.   Two publications provide measured sections, with the first placing the whole of the section in the Theresa, while the second  reports 3.55 meters of March Formation at the top, underlain by 3.1 meters of Nepean Formation.   A paper by Bond and Greggs (1976) in which they discuss and attempt to redefine the March - Oxford boundary exemplifies the problem in differentiating between the March and Oxford formations.  Bond and Greggs (1976) provide a measured section for an outcrop   1.6 km east of Port Elmsley, Lanark County, Ontario.  They show  0.8 m of Oxford Formation underlain by 0.8 m of   March Formation.   Williams and Wolf (1984a) mapped the outcrop as March formation.

Williams (1991, pages 48 - 57) has the best summary of the rocks that make up the March formation, and provides a number of measured sections throughout Eastern Ontario where the March is present.  Professor Dix (2020) of Carleton University has prepared a short YouTube video on a Theresa Formation outcrop in the Ottawa area.   I suspect that Selleck’s (1984) paper is the best for the stratigraphy  and sedimentology of the Theresa Formation, but it was published in Northeastern Geology,  is not readily available, and I have not been able to obtain a copy.   Bjerstedt  and Erickson (1989), Erickson (1993), and Erickson  and Bjerstedt (1993) have reported on Trace fossils and bioturbation in the Theresa Formation.  Wilson (1956, Plate 1, No. 2, 3) contains photographs of two gastropods found in the March Formation.
 
Husinec and Donaldson (2014) and Selleck (1978, 1983) provide field trip guides with stops at Theresa formation outcrops  in New York State.  

For those in the Ottawa area Quentin Gall (2010) collated a field trip guide with a stop at the outcrop behind the Walmart in Kanata.   The rocks directly behind Walmart are the underlying Nepean Formation sandstones while the rocks on the other side of Kanata Avenue are March/Theresa formation dolomitic carbonate beds as well as quartz-rich sandstone beds. 
   
In Lanark County good outcrops of March/Theresa rock can be found south of Mississippi Lake along Drummond Concession 7, along Highway 15 just north of Smiths Falls,   along highway 7 north of Perth, and along county road 43 east of Perth heading towards Port Elmsley and on to Smiths Falls.

Husinec and Donaldson (2014) comment that  “The maximum estimated thickness of the Theresa Formation in northwest New York varies from 28 m (Selleck, 1984) to 43 m (Cushing, 1916).”   Williams (1991, page 55) mentions that “The thickness of the March Formation [in Ontario] shows a  general southeastward increase, ranging from 6.6 metres in the Carleton Place map area (31F/1) to 63.7 metres in the Alexandria map area (31G/7). ... Reduced thicknesses occur in the southern part of the Ottawa-St. Lawrence Lowland in the vicinity of prominent Precambrian topographic highs.”

Selleck (1978) provided a three part division of the Theresa, which  Selleck (1983) concisely  describes as “Theresa Formation consists of three informal subdivisions: lower Theresa thin-bedded calcareous siltstones of intrashelf lagoon origin; middle Theresa interbedded bioturbated dolomitic sandstones and cross-laminated quartz sandstones deposited in a shallow subtidal to low tidal flat environment; and upper Theresa sandy dolostones, dolomitic sandstones and calcareous siltstones of high tidal flat origin.”  Bjerstedt  and   Erickson (1989) provide a composite section for the Theresa (as it is not exposed in its entirety), dividing it into three parts: a  lower section consists of “gray, medium- to thick-bedded, calcareous, fine-grained sandstone” ... the lower 10 m of [which] is extremely bioturbated, and individual sedimentation units can be seen in centimeter(s)-thick, scour-based, horizontally laminated sandstones with burrowed tops”;  the middle section “consists of gray, thick-bedded to massive, poorly sorted, calcareous to dolomitic, medium- to coarse-grained sandstone”;   the upper section consists of “white, meter-thick, thin- to medium-bedded, fine- to medium-grained, siliceous to calcareous, planar and herringbone cross-bedded sandstone.” They interpreted the lithographic change to have “resulted from migration of low intertidal sand flats across a shallow inner shelf.”    Béland Otis (2017, 2018, 2019) shows a  three part division of the Theresa but appears to be mapping the March/Theresa as one unit and has  not defined her parts A, B, C.

Salad Hersi and  Dix (2004) divided the Theresa formation of Ontario and Quebec into three  depositional units (A, B and C) which they believe “record a vertical peritidal-subtidal-peritidal depositional cycle. Unit A contains clastic-dominated sand shoal/flat facies and also is well represented in SW Quebec, beyond the eastern limits of the [Ottawa] embayment. Unit B contains predominantly normal to marginal marine subtidal bioclastic dolostones that are restricted to the eastern and central parts of the [Ottawa] embayment, as well as farther to the east in SW Quebec. Unit C contains marginal marine clastic and carbonate facies. The clastic content  of Unit C decreases eastward (basinward) and intertidal to subtidal sandy to pure carbonates become predominant in the region south of Montreal.”
   
Greggs and Bond (1971) provide two reference sections for the March Formation at Brockville (which is not in  March Township), which they divided into two parts: [A] a lowermost 90 ft (27.5 m) section of  blue-gray sandstone rich in conodonts, with beds having gradational tops and bottoms, in which individual burrows are evident , apparently deposited in a shallow, offshore marine environment such as a tidal or sub-tidal flat; and [B] an upper part, the dominant lithology of which is a white or buff-colored, medium-grained, fairly massive sandstone, with bioturbation not as severe in these beds as it is in the lower sandstones.

Bond and  Greggs (1973) describe six reference sections for the March Formation near Brockville, Ontario (as the March is not  exposed in its entirety) in order to make a complete section. They report  that “Two dominant lithologies characterize the formation: a lower succession of highly bioturbated, blue-gray dolomitic quartz arenites, and an upper unit of pale yellow-gray to yellow-brown, calcareous and siliceous, quartz arenites. ...Deposition of the  upper, yellow-gray sandstones of the March Formation  appears to have  occurred in a shallower marine environment than  the lower blue-gray sandstones.” 

Béland Otis (2017) in her mapping of the Ottawa area reported that the March Formation “is composed of interbedded quartz arenite, dolomitic and calcareous arenite to quartz wacke and sandy dolomudstone to dolograinstone. The quartz beds are quite similar to that of the underlying Nepean Formation (Keeseville Formation). The other lithofacies tend to be thin to medium bedded and grey to brown, with some greenish weathering associated with glauconite. Calcite-filled vugs and gastropods were observed.”

In my June 4th blog posting I mentioned that in 1979 John Cass had authored  a Master’s thesis   entitled ‘Paleoenvironmental interpretation of the Beekmantown Group within the Ottawa Basin’.  Cass rejected Wilson’s renaming the Theresa formation as the March formation.     He had a unique view of what we now call the  Theresa , breaking it down into the Theresa and Buck Bridge Formation, with the Buck Bridge formation consisting of a lower Heuvelton member and an upper March member.   While this is a unique interpretation for Canada, he was following Chapman’s (1915, p. 289) breakdown of transition beds in Upper New York into the Theresa, Heuevelton and Bucks Bridge.   He provides a few measured sections, including one at  Phillipsville, Ontario.

Giles  (1976), in an  unpublished doctoral thesis on the Beekmantown Group within the Ottawa Basin,  also rejected Wilson's name March Formation.  His proposed Beekmantown Group  includes four formations: Prescott, Crystal Rock, Oxford Mills, and Laggan.   He suggested that his Lower Prescott could be correlated with the Theresa formation of Quebec, and his Crystal Rock, Oxford Mills, and Laggan with the Beuharnois formation in Quebec.  While no one has followed Giles’ nomenclature he did make incisive comments on where to place the boundary between the Potsdam and the Theresa.  At page 249 of his thesis he designates the Iroquois quarry as his principal reference section for his Prescott formation and Crystal Rock formation, and provides a measured section.  The quarry is at Iroquois, along the St. Lawrence, two thirds of the way between Brockville and Morrisburg.

Christopher Brett
Ottawa 

Addendum (September 29, 2021):  Catherine Béland Otis of the Ontario Geological Survey  was kind enough to send me two of Selleck’s papers from Northeastern Geology:
Selleck, Bruce W. , 1984.
Stratigraphy  and sedimentology of the Theresa Formation   (Cambrian-Ordovician)     in  northwestern  New York State.  Northeastern  Geology, 6: 118 - 129
Selleck, Bruce W., 1987
Origin of Voids in Peritidal Facies of the Theresa Formation and Ogdensburg Dolostone (Lower Ordovician), New York and Ontario.  Northeastern Geology, Vol. 9, No. 2, pp. 76-88  
       
Selleck’s (1984) paper is worth reading.  One point he makes is that “In those areas [in New York State] where the Theresa Formation overlaps Proterozoic quartzite ridges, boulder and cobble conglomerates are common within the lower and middle portions of the formation.”   Further, a location in New York which he believes to be Theresa conglomerate has been mapped by others as Potsdam conglomerate.

 Selleck (1987) believes that the calcite filled voids in the Theresa  originated as anhydrite nodules and  anhydrite clasts where dissolution of the evaporite mineral generated the voids, later  partially to completely filled with crystalline calcite ( and minor quartz, dolomite, Pyrite, sphalerite and fluorite) .  This ties in with the rounded, nodular pseudomorphs of evaporite minerals in the coastal sabkha facies of the underlying Nepean Formation .  
   
I have also added the references to Johnston (1909, 1911), Willis (1912), Parks (1922), Phillpotts (1928) and  Salad Hersi and Dix (2004).

References and Suggested Reading            

Ami, H. M., 1905.
 Preliminary  lists of fossil organic remains from the Potsdam, Beekmantown  (Calciferous), Chazy, Black River, Trenton,  Utica, and  Pleistocene  formations  comprised  within the Perth Sheet (No. 119)  in  eastern Ontario. Geological  Survey of Canada, Annual Report, New Series, Vol. 14, Part J, pp. 80 - 89

Béland Otis, Catherine, 2017    
Paleozoic Mapping of Eastern Ontario, Ontario Geological Survey, Summary of Field Work and Other Activities, 2017, Open File Report 6333
http://www.geologyontario.mndm.gov.on.ca/mndmfiles/pub/data/imaging/ofr6333//ofr6333.pdf

Béland Otis, Catherine, 2018
Paleozoic Geology of Eastern Ontario: Ottawa Area. Paleozoic Geology and Energy Studies  Project SO-18-006 , pages 22-1 to 22-10,  Ontario Geological Survey Summary of Field Work and Other Activities, 2018, OFR 6350

Béland Otis, Catherine, 2019
Paleozoic Geology of Eastern Ontario: Arnprior–Quyon Area, pages 20-1 to 20-10, Project SO-19-005,  Ontario Geological Survey Summary of Field Work and Other Activities, 2019, OFR 6360


Bernstein, Lawrence, 1992
A revised lithostratigraphy of the Lower-Middle Ordovician Beekmantown Group, St.
Lawrence Lowlands,  Quebec and  Ontario.  Can. J. Earth Sci. 29, 2677-2694    
https://cdnsciencepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/e92-212


Bjerstedt, T. W. and J. M. Erickson. 1989.
Trace fossils and bioturbation in peritidal facies of the Potsdam-Theresa Formations (Cambrian-Ordovician), Northwest Adirondacks. Palaios, 4:203–224.
   
Bond, I.J., and Greggs, R.G. 1973.
 Revision of the March Formation (Tremadocian) in southeastern Ontario. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 10 : 1140–1155.    10.1139/e73-098
https://cdnsciencepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/e73-098

Bond, I.J., and Greggs, R.G. 1976
Revision of the Oxford Formation (Arenig) of southeastern Ontario and northern New York State
 Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 13(1):19-26 DOI:10.1139/e76-002

Brett, Christopher P., 2018a
Alice E. Wilson’s Scientific Papers, Maps, Field Trip Guide and Children’s Book on Geology - Part 1. Blog Posting  October 17, 2018

Brett, Christopher P., 2018b
Alice E. Wilson’s Scientific Papers, Maps, Field Trip Guide and Children’s Book on Geology - Part 2.  Blog posting October 20, 2018 
http://fossilslanark.blogspot.com/2018/10/alice-e-wilsons-scientific-papers-maps_20.html

Byrne, A. W. 1958.
The stratigraphy and palaeontology  of the Beeckmantown Group in the St. Lawrence Lowlands,
Quebec. Ph.D. thesis, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec
https://escholarship.mcgill.ca/concern/theses/k3569792v

Cass, John I. , 1979
Paleoenvironmental interpretation of the Beekmantown Group within the Ottawa Basin. Thesis, Master of Science, University of Ottawa.  189 pages plus 90 page Appendix. https://ruor.uottawa.ca/bitstream/10393/8394/1/MK43988.PDF
http://hdl.handle.net/10393/8394

Cole, L. H., 1923
Silica in Canada its occurrence, exploitation, and uses. Part I -.Eastern Canada.  Canada Mines Branch, Publication 555, 1923, 135 pages (9 sheets), https://doi.org/10.4095/307756

Cushing, H. P., 1908
Lower portion of the Paleozoic section in Northwestern New York,  Bull. Geol. Soc. Amer., Vol. XIX, 1908, at p. 155-  176 at 159, 160
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/113691#page/205/mode/1up

Cushing,  H. P.,  H.Le Roy Fairchild, R. Ruedemann, C.H. Smyth, 1910
Geology of the Thousand Islands Region: Alexandria Bay, Cape Vincent, Clayton, Grindstone and Theresa Quadrangles,  New York, Museum Bulletin 145,  194 pages
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/109608#page/7/mode/1up


Dean, Ronald S.,  1962
A study  of  St. Lawrence Lowland Shales.  Unpublished  Ph.D.  thesis, McGill University,
Mont real,  Quebec
https://central.bac-lac.gc.ca/.item?id=TC-QMM-115085&op=pdf&app=Library&oclc_number=893571877   
 

Dix, George, 2020
Theresa Formation  (Marine Shoreface).  A YouTube video [2:56 minutes ; 7 Oct 2020] 
https://youtu.be/EJz12HnOEg0 

Dix, George R.,  Salad Hersi, Osman, and  Nowlan, Godfrey S.,  2004
The Potsdam-Beekmantown Group boundary, Nepean Formation type section (Ottawa, Ontario): a cryptic sequence boundary, not a conformable transition, Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 2004, 41(8): 897-902,  http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/pdf/10.1139/e04-040

Ells, R. W., 1895
The Potsdam and Calciferous formations of Quebec and eastern Ontario: Royal Society of Canada,  Proc. Trans.,  12,  IV, 21-30, 1895. 
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/40846#page/635/mode/1up


Ells, R. W., 1901
Parts of Counties of Renfrew, Lanark, Lennox and Addington, Frontenac and Carleton (Perth Sheet, No. 110, Geological Survey of Canada, Map 789. Scale 4 miles to 1 inch
   
Ells, R W,  1902       
Report on the geology and natural resources of the area included in the map of the City of Ottawa and vicinity . Geological Survey of Canada, Annual Report, part G, separate report 741
       
Ellls , R W,  1903
Notes on some interesting rock-contacts in the Kingston district, Ontario. Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., 2nd ser., Vol. IX, sec. 4, pp. 97-108, 1903.
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/41836#page/817/mode/1up

Ells, R W,  1904
 Report on the geology of a portion of eastern Ontario (to accompany map-sheet no. 119), Geological Survey of Canada, Annual Report vol. 14 no. J

Erickson, J. Mark, 1993
Cambro-Ordovician stratigraphy, sedimentation, and ichnobiology of the St. Lawrence Lowlands; Frontenac Arch to the Champlain Valley of New York.  Trip A3(1) New York State Geological Association Field Trip Guidebook,  p.68-95

Erickson, J. M. and T. W. Bjerstedt. 1993
Traces Fossils and Stratigraphy in the Potsdam and Theresa Formations of the St. Lawrence Lowland;~New York. Trip A-3(2). New York State Geological Association Field Trip Guidebook, pages 97 - 119. 

Gall, Quentin, 2010   
Geology of the Ottawa Area. Ottawa-Gatineau Geoheritage Project.  Field trip. https://static1.squarespace.com/static/525bf175e4b00f431dc971c0/t/525ca7f6e4b048ac9edb6cb0/1381804022438/Geology+Of+The+Ottawa+Area.pdf

Giles, P.  S. 1976.
Stratigraphy,  petrology,  and  diagenesis  of Beekmantown carbonate  rocks. Ph.D. thesis,  University of Western Ontario,  London,  Ontario
https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/digitizedtheses/904/

Grabau, AW, 1909
Physical and Faunal Evolution of North America during Ordovicic, Siluric and Early Devonic Time , Journal of Geology, Vol. 9, pages 209 -252
https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/pdf/10.1086/621606

Greggs, Robert G.  and Ivor  J. Bond, 1971
Conodonts from the March and Oxford Formations in the Brockville Area, Ontario. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 8, 1455
   
Greggs, R.G. and W.A. Gorman, 1976
Geology of the Thousand Islands. Parks Canada
http://www.oliverkilian.com/ecology/thousand-islands/island-insights/geology/rocks.html
“the March Formation is the exact lithological and stratigraphical equivalent to the Theresa.”

Husinec, Antun  and J Allan Donaldson,  2014
Lower Paleozoic Sedimentary Succession of the St. Lawrence River Valley, New York and Ontario, in : Geology of the Northwestern Adirondacks and St. Lawrence River Valley (pp.1-28)  86th NEGSA Annual Meeting Field Guidebook, Chapter: A-1. Publisher: New York State Geological Association

Johnston, W. A.,  1909
Simcoe Sheet, pages. 97 - 102, in Geological Survey of Canada, Summary Report for the year 1908
   
Johnston, W. A. , 1911
Simcoe District, Ontario. Pages 188-192 , in Geological Survey of Canada, Summary Report of the Department of Mines, Geological Survey of Canada for the year 1910
   
Keith, M. L., 1949
Sandstone as a  source of silica sands in southeastern Ontario; Ontario Dept. Mines, Vol.55, pt.5, 36p. (published 1949). Accompanied by Map 1946-9, scale l   inch to 2  miles
http://www.geologyontario.mndmf.gov.on.ca/mndmfiles/pub/data/imaging/ARV55/ARV55.pdf

Kindle, E. M., 1916
The Ordovician Limestones of the Kingston Area.,  Appendix 1, pages 37-44 to M.B. Baker’s paper The Geology of Kingston and Vicinity, Twenty-Fifth Annual Report of the Ontario Bureau of Mines, 1916, being  Volume 25, Part 3
           
Landing, Ed, 2007
Ediacaran-Ordovician of East Laurentia- Geologic Setting and Controls on Deposition along the New York Promontory.  Pages 5-24 in  Ediacaran-Ordovician of East Laurentia - S. W. Ford Memorial Volume.  New York State Museum Bulletin 510, 94 pages        https://exhibitions.nysm.nysed.gov/publications/bulletin/510-16505.pdf

Landing, E., Salad Hersi, O.,  Amati, L., Westrop, S.R., Franzi, D.A., 2019
Early Paleozoic rifting and reactivation of a passive-margin rift: Insights from detrital zircon provenance signatures of the Potsdam Group, Ottawa graben: Comment. GSA Bulletin; March/April 2019; v. 131; no. 3/4; p. 695–698; https://doi.org/10.1130/B35104.1; published online 25 January 2019.


Livingstone, K. W. , Hill, P. A., Wilson, Alice E. and  Kirwan, J. L., 1974,
Geology, Arnprior, Ontario;. Geological Survey of Canada, "A" Series Map 1363A, 1 sheet, scale 1:50,000   [Precambrian geology by K. W. Livingstone, P. A. Hill and others 1963, 1964, 1965, compiled by K. W. Livingstone 1965. Paleozoic geology by Alice E. Wilson, compiled by J. L. Kirwan 1963. Revised by P. A. Hill, 1972.]
  https://doi.org/10.4095/109148


Logan, W. E. 1852.
On the geology of the Beauharnois  region.  Geological   Survey of Canada,   Report of Progress
1851-1852, pp. 5-56.         

Logan, W. E., 1863
The Geology  of Canada. Geological  Survey  of Canada,  Report  of Progress from
its Commencement to 1863.

Logan, W.E.,  1865   
Geological map of Canada and the adjacent regions, including parts of other British provinces and of the United States; Geological Survey of Canada, Multicoloured, Geological Map 53,  http://www.science.gc.ca/eic/site/063.nsf/vwimages/175_22.jpg/$file/175_22.jpg
 

Lowe, D.G., Arnott, R.W.C., Chiarenzelli, J.R., and Rainbird, R.H., 2018,
Early Paleozoic rifting and reactivation of a passive-margin rift: Insights from detrital zircon provenance signatures of the Potsdam Group, Ottawa graben: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 130, no. 7/8, p. 1377–1396, https:// doi .org /10.1130 /B31749 .1 .

Lowe, D.G., Arnott, R.W.C., Chiarenzelli, J.R., and Rainbird, R.H., 2019,
Early Paleozoic rifting and reactivation of a passive-margin rift: Insights from detrital zircon provenance signatures of the Potsdam Group, Ottawa graben: Reply. Geological Society of America Bulletin, March/April 2019, v. 131, no. 3/4, pages 699-703; published online January 25, 2019.  https://pubs.geoscienceworld.org/gsa/gsabulletin/article/131/3-4/699/568492/Early-Paleozoic-rifting-and-reactivation-of-a


Maddox, D C, 1930
Thicknesses of the Ordovician formations in Ontario and Quebec, , in Summary report, 1930, part D; Geological Survey of Canada; Geological Survey of Canada, Summary Report 1930, pt. D, 1931 p. 49-57, https://doi.org/10.4095/102042

 Miller, A. H.;  C. A. French, and M. E. Wilson, 1929
Geophysical Survey of the Hull-Gloucester and Hazeldean Faults. Part IV in Geological Survey of Canada,   Memoir 165, Studies  of Geophysical Methods, 1928 and 1929
       
Parks, W. A., 1912
REPORT on the Building and Ornamental Stones of Canada, Volume 1 [Ontario], Canada, Department of Mines, Mines Branch, 376 pages


Parks, William Arthur , 1922
Presidential Address [discussing the history of Stratigraphy and Paleontology in Canada], Proceedings and Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada  Series 3, Volume 16, Section IV, pages 1- 46  https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/41928#page/778/mode/1up

Parks, W.A., 1931
 Natural Gas in the St. Lawrence Valley, Quebec; Que. Bur. Mines, Ann. Rept. 1930, Pt.D, pp. 3-98, 1931.

Phillpotts, Dennis M., 1928
Correlation of the Ordovician in Canada. Master of Science Thesis,  University of Alberta.  https://archive.org/details/correlationoford00phil

Raymond, P.E., 1912
Ordovician of the Ottawa Valley.  Geological Survey , Canada , summary Report 1911, pp 351-356   https://doi.org/10.4095/292550

Raymond, P.E.,  1913 a
 Ordovician of Montreal and Ottawa. 12th International Geological Congress, Montreal, Que., Guidebook 3, pp. 137-160.  https://archive.org/details/guidebooksofexcu06inte_0 
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/129908#page/3/mode/1up   

Raymond, P.E.,  1913b
Notes on some new and old trilobites in the Victoria Memorial Museum. Geological Survey of Canada, Victoria Memorial Museum, Bulletin 1, pp. 33 — 39.  October 23, 1913    

Raymond, P.E. 1914.
L'Ordovicien a Montreal et a Ottawa. 12th International Geological Congress, Montreal, Que., Guidebook 3, pp. 147-174.

Reinhardt, E.W., Wilson, A.E, Liberty, B.A., 1973
 Carleton Place, GSC Map 1362A.  Scale 1:50,000. Precambrian Geology and Compilation by E.W. Reinhardt, 1963, 1969, 1972. Paleozoic Geology By A. E. Wilson, 1946.  Paleozoic compilation by B. A. Liberty, 1963, with minor changes by Reinhardt, 1972. 

Sandford, B.V. , and Quillion , R.G.  1959
Subsurface stratigraphy of upper Cambrian rocks in Southwestern Ontario. Canada Geological Survey, Paper 58-12,  34 pages   https://doi.org/10.4095/101213 [Sandford  and Quillion (1959) applied the term Theresa Formation for subsurface stratigraphy in Southwestern Ontario, overlying the Potsdam, and as an equivalent to the Theresa in New York State.]

Salad Hersi, Osman and George R. Dix, 2004
 Shelf –Wide tectonic And Eustatic Control on Sedimentation of Mixed Carbonate-Clastic Sequence:Early Ordovician Theresa Formation of Eastern Ontario, Canada.
  Canadian Society of Petroleum Geologists Convention At Calgary, Alberta.
Abstract at: https://geoconvention.com/wp-content/uploads/abstracts/2004/052S0128.pdf
 

Salad Hersi, O., Lavoie, D., and Nowlan, G.S., 2002a
 Stratigraphy of the Upper Cambrian Strites Pond Formation, Philipsburg Group, southern Quebec, and its implications for the Cambrian platform in eastern Canada. Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology, 50 : 542–565.


Salad  Hersi, O.,  Lavoie,  D.,  Hilowle  Mohamed,  A., and  Nowlan,G.S. , 2002b
Subaerial unconformity at the Potsdam-Beekmantown contact  in  the  Quebec  Reentrant:  regional  significance  for  the Laurentian  continental  margin  history.  Bulletin  of  Canadian
Petroleum Geology, 50 : 419–440                                           
   
Salad Hersi, O.;  D. Lavoie, and G.S. Nowlan, 2003
Reappraisal of the Beekmantown Group sedimentology and stratigraphy, Montréal area,
southwestern Quebec: implications for understanding the depositional evolution of the
Lower–Middle Ordovician Laurentian passive margin of eastern Canada.  Can. J. Earth Sci. 40: 149–176 


Selleck, B. W. 1978. 
Paleoenvironments of the Potsdam Sandstone and Theresa Formation   of   the   southwestern
St. Lawrence Lowlands. New  York State  Geological  Association, 50th Annual Meeting  Fieldtrip  Guidebook, Syracuse, N.Y., pp. 173 - 184

Selleck, B. W., 1983.
Lower Ordovician Stratigraphy and sedimentology,  southwestern  St.  Lawrence  Lowlands.  New  York  State Geological  Association, 55th Annual  Meeting Fieldtrip  Guidebook,
Potsdam, N.Y.,  pp. 9.1 -9.9.    Also available as a Google Earth Field Trip at NYSGA1983M.kml from http://ottohmuller.com/nysga2ge/FrontPage.html  

Selleck, B. W. 1984.
Stratigraphy  and sedimentology of the Theresa Formation   (Cambrian-Ordovician)     in  northwestern  New York State.  Northeastern  Geology, 6: 118 - 129

Selleck, Bruce W., 1987
Origin of Voids in Peritidal Facies of the Theresa Formation and Ogdensburg Dolostone (Lower Ordovician), New York and Ontario.  Northeastern Geology, Vol. 9, No. 2, pp. 76-88
   
Winder, C. G.,1961
Lexicon of Paleozoic names in southwestern Ontario, University of Toronto Press, 121 pages
Theresa Formation: Upper Cambrian,  at page 110

Williams,  D.A.  1991. 
Paleozoic  Geology  of  the  Ottawa-St.  Lawrence  Lowland,  Southern  Ontario;  Ontario  Geological  Survey,  Open  File  Report  5770,  292p
    

Williams, D.A. and Wolf, R. R. 1984a
Paleozoic Geology of the Perth Area, Southern Ontario. Ontario Geological Survey. Map P 2724. Scale 1:50,000. Geology 1982


Williams, D.A., and Wolf, R.R., 1984 b
Paleozoic Geology of the Carleton Place Area, Southern Ontario; Ontario Geological Survey, Map P. 2725, Geological Series-Preliminary Map, scale 1:50 000. Geology 1982.

Willis,  Bailey, 1912   
Index to the Stratigraphy of North America. U.S. Government Printing Office, 1912, 894 pages
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/116335#page/202/mode/1up

Wilson, Alice E., 1932a
The Palaeozoic Rocks of the Thurso Area.  Unpublished report of the Geological Survey of Canada
http://gq.mines.gouv.qc.ca/documents/examine/GM15285/GM15285.pdf
   
Wilson, Alice E., 1932b
Palaeontological Notes; Canadian Field-Naturalist. 46, pp. 133-140.
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/89295#page/163/mode/1up
           
Wilson, Alice E., 1936:
 A Synopsis of the Ordovician of Ontario and western Quebec and the related succession in New York: in Contributions to the study of the Ordovician of Ontario and Quebec;  Geol. Survey of Canada Memoir  202, Pub. 2427, pp. 1–20, 1936.

Wilson, Alice E. 1937a
Geology of the Paleozoic Rocks of the Ottawa Area.  Unpublished report of the Geological Survey of Canada

Wilson, Alice E., 1937b
Erosional Intervals Indicated by Contacts in the Vicinity of Ottawa, Ontario.  Transactions, Royal Society of Canada, Section IV, pages 45 -60

 Wilson, Alice E.,  1938a: 
Ottawa Sheet, (East Half) , Carleton and Hull Counties, Ontario and Quebec, Geological Survey of Canada,  Map 413A, Scale 1 inch to 1 mile, Geology by A. E. Wilson, 1935
https://doi.org/10.4095/107511 Nepean, March , Oxford

Wilson, Alice E.,  1938b
Ottawa Sheet, (West  Half) , Carleton and Hull Counties, Ontario and Quebec, Geological Survey of Canada, Map 414A,  Scale 1 inch to 1 mile, Geology by A. E. Wilson, 1935
https://doi.org/10.4095/107545    Nepean, March , Oxford

Wilson, Alice E.,  1940a
Casselman, Russell, Dundas, Stormont, Prescott, Carleton, and Papineau Counties, Ontario and Québec; Geological Survey of Canada, "A" Series Map 587A, 1940,   miles, Geology by A. E. Wilson, 1935, 1936, and 1937   https://doi.org/10.4095/107369    Nepean, March , Oxford
              
Wilson, Alice E.,  1940b
 Nepean, Carleton, Lanark, Grenville, Dundas, Gatineau and Papineau Counties, Ontario and Québec;  Geological Survey of Canada, "A" Series Map 588A, 1940, 1 sheet, 1 inch to 2 miles. Geology by A. E. Wilson, 1935, 1936, and 1937,  https://doi.org/10.4095/107428
Nepean, March , Oxford

Wilson, Alice E.,  1941a
Valleyfield, Québec and Ontario; Geological Survey of Canada, "A" Series Map 660A, 1941, Geology by A. E. Wilson, 1938  and 1939  https://doi.org/10.4095/107850
Nepean, March [Beauharnois] , Oxford
       
Wilson, Alice E., 1941b
L'Orignal, Ontario and Québec; Geological Survey of Canada, "A" Series Map 662A, 1 sheet, 1 inch to 2 miles, Geology by A. E. Wilson, 1937  and 1938 https://doi.org/10.4095/107972   Nepean, March [Beauharnois] , Oxford

Wilson, A. E., 1941c
Maxville, Ontario and Québec; Geological Survey of Canada, "A" Series Map 661A, 1941, 1 sheet, 1 inch to 2 miles, Geology by A. E. Wilson, 1929 and 1937  https://doi.org/10.4095/107973     Nepean, March [Beauharnois] , Oxford
          
Wilson, A. E., 1942
Prescott, Ontario; Geological Survey of Canada, "A" Series Map 710A, 1942, 1 sheet, Geology by A.E. Wilson 1939, 1940  https://doi.org/10.4095/107616  Nepean, March , Oxford

Wilson, A. E., 1946a
Ottawa-Cornwall , Ontario and Quebec, Geological Survey of Canada, "A" Series Map 852A,  Scale 1 inch to 4 Miles, Geology by A. E. Wilson, 1929 and 1935 to 1940  
https://doi.org/10.4095/107544  Nepean, March , Oxford

Wilson, Alice E. 1946b
 Geology  of  the  Ottawa - St. Lawrence Lowland, Ontario and Quebec.  Geological  Survey  of
Canada, Memoir  241. 65 pages
       
Wilson, Alice E., 1954:
 Ottawa, Carleton, Gatineau, and Papineau Counties, Ontario and Québec; Geological Survey of Canada, "A" Series Map 1038A, 1954, 1 sheet, https://doi.org/10.4095/107547
   
Wilson, Alice E., 1956
 A Guide to the Geology of the Ottawa District, Volume 70, 1,  The Canadian Field-Naturalist, 73 pages, including five plates, and 1 map sheet
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/90128#page/9/mode/1up

Wilson, Morley E., 1931a
Geology of Ottawa district, pages 192-196, chapter 2 in Geophysical Survey of the Hull-Gloucester and Hazeldean Faults. By A. H. Miller, C. A. French, and M. E. Wilson; in Geological Survey of Canada Memoir 165, Studies  of Geophysical Methods, 1928 and 1929
Eve, A S; Gilchrist, L; Keys, D A; Mawdsley, J B; Swartz, J H;   227 pages

Wilson, Morley E., 1931b
Ripple marks near Perth, Lanark County, Ontario: Canadian Field-Naturalist, vol. 45, no. 2, pp. 25-27, 3 figs., February 1931; 
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/89041#page/41/mode/1up

Wilson, Morley E., 1931c
Ripple Marks in the Lower Palaeozoic of the Ottawa Valley,  Canadian Mining Journal, Volume 52, 347-348

Wilson, Morley E. and  Dugas, Jean,  1961,
Map 1089A, Geology, Perth, Lanark and Leeds Counties, Ontario, Geological Survey of Canada; Geology by Morley E. Wilson, 1930 and Jean Dugas, 1949; Descriptive notes by Jean Dugas.
https://doi.org/10.4095/107951
       
Wright, J. F.,   1923
 Brockville-mallorytown map area, Ontario.  Geological Survey of Canada, Memoir 134, 1923, 63 pages ), https://doi.org/10.4095/100859 

Wolf, Rainer R and Robert W. Dalrymple, 1985
Sedimentology of the Cambro-Ordovician Sandstones of Eastern Ontario.  Geoscience Research Grant Program Summary of Research 1984-1985. Ontario Geological Survey Miscellaneous Paper 127, pages 112-118.


Wykes, Eric Robinson, 1931
The petrology of some crystalline rocks of the Perth sheet,  McGill University, Master of Science Thesis,  52 pages, including maps. 
https://escholarship.mcgill.ca/concern/theses/n870zt47m

Wynne-Edwards, H. R., 1967
 Westport map Area, Ontario, With Special Emphasis On the Precambrian Rocks, Geological Survey of Canada, Memoir 346, 142 pages
http://geoscan.nrcan.gc.ca/starweb/geoscan/servlet.starweb?path=geoscan/fulle.web&search1=R=100533  )
 

Friday, 4 June 2021

If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it fall, does it make a sound?

 Below I summarize a few obscure writings on the Potsdam sandstone.

A 1979 Master’s Thesis by John Cass on the Beekmantown Group in the Ottawa Basin


In 1979 John Cass authored  a Master’s thesis at the University of Ottawa entitled ‘Paleoenvironmental interpretation of the Beekmantown Group within the Ottawa Basin”.   This thesis covered the  Potsdam Group as Cass included the Potsdam within the Beekmantown Group.   

Cass  noted that Fisher (1977) had included the Keeseville formation within the Beekmantown, and commented (page 20) that “Without conclusive evidence of a major disconformity at or near the assumed Cambro-Ordovician boundary or within the Potsdam formation within the Ottawa basin, the entire transitional sequence from sandstone resting noncomformably on the Precambrian basement to carbonate underlying the Chazy Group, has been termed the Beekmantown Group for the purpose of this report.”    More recently, Dr. Bruce Sanford’s (2007) doctoral thesis and Dr. David Lowe’s (2016) doctoral thesis reported on a major systemwide unconformity within the Potsdam Group that is found in Ontario, Quebec and New York.  See also Sanford and Arnott (2010), Lowe et al. (2017, 2018).

Interestingly, Cass rejected Alice E. Wilson’s renaming of the Potsdam as the Nepean Formation, and divided the Potsdam into the Basal Member, Ausable Member and the Keeseville member (following Fischer, 1968).   He considered the Keeseville member in Ontario to be equivalent to Clark’s Cairnside formation in Quebec and to most of Alice E. Wilson’s Nepean formation in Ontario.

Cass also rejected Wilson’s renaming the Theresa formation as the March formation and rejected Wilson’s renaming of the Beauharnois formation as the Oxford formation.    He had a unique view of what we now call the  Theresa , breaking it down into the Theresa and Buck Bridge Formation, with the Buck Bridge formation consisting of a lower Heuvelton member and an upper March member.   While this is a unique interpretation for Canada, he was following Chapman’s (1915, p. 289) breakdown of transition beds in Upper New York into the Theresa, Heuevelton and Bucks Bridge.  

He provides a number of measured sections, including figures 6-8 and 6-9 for the Phillipsville outcrop, which he places in the Heuvelton member of the Theresa.  Some have mapped  it as Nepean; others, as March/Theresa.  (I have one friend who is a geologist to whom I commented “If you had three geologists look at that outcrop, you would get four opinions.”  My friend replied “Chris, if you had three geologists, you would get eight opinions.” He retired a few years later.)  Keith (1948) identified it as Potsdam formation. Wynne-Edwards’s (1967) map 1182A, where the Paleozoic Geology was by Morley Wilson  and G. M. Brownell in 1927 - 1929, shows it as Nepean Formation.  Williams and Wolf (1984, Map P. 2723) mapped at least the top of the outcrop as March.   Dr. Sanford (2007) mapped it as Potsdam.  Dr. Al Donaldson  and Chris Finlay (2008) identified it as Potsdam in a field trip guide. Williams (1991, OGS, OFR 5770, page 226) provides a measured section for the outcrop (His Section S WE-1: roadcut, Philipsville UTM 409500E, 4943350N) reporting 3.55 meters of March Formation at the top, underlain by 3.1 meters of Nepean Formation.   Professor Arnott (2012), in a field trip guide, comments that the escarpment is “Probably all within the Theresa/March” but adds the qualification “Or is it?” About four years ago I recall asking Dave Lowe what he thought and he replied Theresa.   I thought  at least the base was Nepean Formation.

The information in John Cass’s  Master’s thesis was never published and as far as I can determine has never been referred to other than by Williams (1991, page 22) who lists it among various studies on the Potsdam and Beekmantown Group and by Globensky (1986, page 71)  who rejected Cass’s terminology.    Globensky  (1986, page 71)  commented  “[ Google Translation from French:]  It is the same with Cass (1979) who rejects all the terminology used in Ontario, to adopt in part the American terms and to propose new ones; however, it retains the Beauharnois Formation. For him, the Beekmantown Group includes all the units between the Precambrian base and the Chazy Group. We are not inclined to accept these changes. It seems to us that the proposals of Giles (1976) and Cass (1979) only increase the profusion of names in the stratigraphic sequence of the St. Lawrence Lowlands. We prefer to stick to the definition of Wilson (1946); however, we use the equivalent names in Quebec, as defined by Clark (1966) and modified by Globensky (1982a). Thus, the Beekmantown Group includes only two formations: Theresa and Beauharnois.

A 1985 Master’s Thesis by Lee E. McRae on the basal Potsdam Sandstone in New York State, southwestern Quebec, and southeastern Ontario


In  1985 Lee McRae authored  a Master’s thesis at Dartmouth College entitled ‘Sedimentology and paleomagnetics of the basal Potsdam Sandstone in the Adirondack border region, New York State, southwestern Quebec, and southeastern Ontario’ .  

Lee McRae concentrated on the nonmarine facies within the basal Potsdam formation of the Adirondack border areas of northern New York, south eastern Ontario along the St. Lawrence (Brockville, Gananoque, Kingston) , and southwestern Quebec (Covey Hill, St. Cristostome, Ile Perrot, NW Montreal), only briefly mentioning the overlying shallow marine units. She provides  observations  and  analysis of sedimentary structures,  paleocurrent directions, and petrographic studies .   She identified six distinct lithofacies:  

Lithofacies 1 - Massive matrix-supported conglomerate (e.g. at Allens Falls, N.Y. at Mosherville, N.Y.  at Whittaker Falls, N.Y.), interpreted to represent an alluvial fan that developed as clastic debris was rapidly shed off an adjacent Prccambrian high debris flows.

Lithofacies 2 - Stratified framework-supported conglomerate (e.g. , a thick conglomerate sequence on Wellesley Island, N.Y. and the lower part of the sequence at Browns Bay, Ontario) with cut and fill structures common, interpreted to represent proximal gravelly braided-stream deposits.

Lithofacies 3 -Framework supported conglomerate-arkose (e.g., the upper sections at Wellesley Island, N.Y., and sequences at Oak Point, Dekalb Junction, and south of Canton), charactcrized  by finer framework supported conglomerate, shallow scour surfaces, and lenticular pods of conglomerate, with clast imbrication well developed, and trough and planar cross stratified sandstones,  interpreted to represent intermediate to distal gravelly braided-stream deposits (the downstream, distal equivalent of Lithofacies 2).

Lithofacies  4 - Pebble conglomerate-arkose fining-upward sequences (e.g., the upper sequences at Nicholveille, the upper section at Whittaker Falls, numerous exposures in the Champlain Valley) , interpreted to represent  sandy braided-stream deposits.

Lithofacies  5 - large-scale cross-bedded quartz arenite (e.g. at Alexandria Bay and at Hannawa Falls), interpreted as deposited in a subaerial, eolian setting.    For Lithofacies 5 she reported some cross-stratification features not consistent with eolian deposition (trough cross bedding; reversely oriented foresets), and suggested an alternative origin  of deposition in a high energy, tidally influenced, near shore estuarine or deltaic environment.   Others including  Sanford (2007) and Lowe (2016) identify the rocks at Hannawa Falls as an eolian deposit.  Husinec  (2020b) and  Hagadorn,  Collette and Belt (2010) emphasize the eolian dunes at Hannawa Falls, but characterize the Hannawa Falls  outcrop as a suite of interfingering eolian dune and aquatic deposits.  Professor  Husinec’s (2020b) YouTube video “Potsdam Sandstone Eolian Deposits" shows the deposits at Hannawa Falls.

Lithofacies  6 - Basal Conglomerate Thick Bedded Quartz Arenite (e.g., a section at Wellesly Island, and an exposure in the Hudson/Mowhawk Valley), characterized by a thin layer of well rounded conglomerate, overlain by a succession of poorly sorted sandstone, in turn overlain by massive bedded quartz arenite,  interpreted as the initial deposits associated with a shallow marine transgression.
            
Lee McRae mentions the seventh Lithofacies, the overlying shallow marine units, but did not cover this facies in her thesis.

Lee McRae makes a point that I have been thinking about for a few years, namely that the type locality for the Potsdam at Hannawa Falls is not typical for the formation as a whole.   (The underlying deposits of the Potsdam  Group are largely aluvial fans or braided stream deposits, while the overlying beds that are largely shallow marine deposits.)   Lee McRae mentions that the locality at Hannawa Falls “typifies the variability in lithologic types which are included under the name “Potdam”, and it is an interesting, perhaps ironic fact that the type exposure is not only imperfectly exposed, but is rather atypical of the formation as a whole.”  Fisher (1977) had commented that while the sandstone at  Hannawa Falls was the type, it was atypical, and renamed it his Ausable Formation: “Ausable Sandstone (Alling, H. L. 1919, p. 144)  Red and pink-white mottled lower Potsdam; probably the red, highly crossbedded sandstones at Hannawa Falls, the type (but atypical!).”   Lowe (2016, page 185) noted that“the well-known large-scale cross-stratified red bed exposures  along the Raquette River south of the town of Potsdam ... were first described by Emmons (1838) and deemed the type section of the “Potsdam Sandstone”. Here, it is deemed the type section of the Hannawa Falls Formation.”
      
Lee McRae noted that “ The desertlike environment of the Precambrian surface allowed for rapid transport and deposition of relatively unweathered sediments and the subsequent construction of a braided alluvial plain system. Field relations ...  suggest that terrestrial Potsdam deposition in the Early and Middle Cambrian largely preceded the marine transgression that deposited the thick, shallow marine units typifying most of the Potsdam sequence.”
         
The last half of Lee McRae’s thesis is devoted to the paleomagnetics of the basal Potsdam Sandstone.
            
Lee McRae’s  Master’s thesis was not published though the part on the sedimentology of the basal Potsdam Sandstone was summarized in an abstract authored by McRae and  Johnson (1986) delivered at the AAPG Annual Convention.  Her work on the Potsdam facies was briefly  cited by Hagadorn and Belt (2008), is relied on in seven places in Hagadorn, Collette and  Belt (2010) and is relied on in Husinec and Donaldson’s ( 2014, pages 2-3) field trip guide.  

Another part of Lee McRae’s thesis dealing with paleomagnetics  was included in a Geology Society of America abstract authored by  McRae,  Johnson,  and Johnson (1986).  It is briefly mentioned by Bruce Selleck (2008, page 145) who commented  “ McRae, et al (1986) used paleomagnetic techniques to determine a poorly-constrained early Paleozoic depositional age for the Ausable member and other basal Potsdam Sandstone units in the northern New York State outcrop belt. However, the intense post-depositional alteration of the Potsdam Sandstone suggests that the primary depositional paleomagnetic signal was not preserved, and that the remanence measured is likely a diagenetic artifact.” (Interestingly, David Lowe (2016) proposed similar early Cambrian depositional ages for the Ausable member.)   McRae,  Johnson,  and Johnson’s  (1986) abstract has been  cited by others:   Landing (2012, p. 465) cites it as support for the proposition that the lower Potsdam might be as old as the Proterozoic;   Hagadorn and  Belt (2008, page 425) cite this paper as support for the proposition that “a significant fraction of the lower strata of the [Potsdam]  could be Early–Middle Cambrian”.

All of Hagadorn and  Belt (2008) , Hagadorn, Collette and  Belt (2010) and Husinec and Donaldson  (2014) reference Lee McRae’s thesis on the Potsdam as a doctoral thesis. While it reads like a doctoral thesis, it was a Masters.  Her doctoral thesis was completed in 1989 and  dealt with chronostratigraphic variability in fluvial sequences as revealed by paleomagnetic isochrons in Miocene Strata.

Engelder And Sbar’s 1976 paper on strain orientation in the Potsdam Sandstone

        
Engelder and Sbar (1976) made strain measurements at five sites in Potsdam sandstone. That part of their paper has been cited in papers on strain measurements in other formations.   What I find interesting is their breakdown of the formations in the Potsdam and the assignment of the oldest part to the late Proterozoic.  They commented (Page 3015) “The Potsdam sandstone consists of three members in ascending order: (1) the Nicholville, (2) the Ausable, and (3) the Keeseville. ... The Nicholville member is a coarse to medium-grained arkose which is believed to be late Proterozoic (Hadrynian) (D. W. Fisher, personal communication, 1975).  The Keeseville is a Late Cambrian medium grained quartz sandstone representing a high-energy intertidal zone (Fisher, 1968).   ... [the Nicholville member] is believed to have filled a later Proterozoic (Hadrynian) fault graben.  The orientaton of the fault grabens filled by the eicholville member is thought to be parallel to the northeast lineaments, which have been mapped by Isachsen (1976) in the Proterozoic (Helikian) rocks of the Adirondack Mountains ( D. W. Fisher, personal communication, 1975).” ...  [Page 3016:] “In contrast to the Nicholville, the Keeseville member was deposited during a marine transgression upon a stable continental shelf.”

Fisher’s  1956 paper on the  Cambrian system of New York State


While this paper was referred to in the 20 years after publication, it has been largely overlooked in the past few decades.  It is worth noting that Fisher rejected the names Ausable and Keeseville:

[page 329:] “Rejected names, by virtue of synonymy and/or lack of usage
   Ausable (Alling, 1919) - lack of usage, probably not a valid unit
   Keeseville (Emmons, 1841)  – not a valid unit”

[page 333: ] “ KEESEVILLE - Although Emmons (1841, pp 130-131) treated the Keeseville sandstone as a variety of the Potsdam sandstone, the name later was revived for the upper predominantly white portion of the Potsdam and the name Potsdam was restricted to the lower , largely red , portion ( Chadwick , 1920 ) . The type locality is at Keeseville , Clinton County , near famous Ausable Chasm .  As reddish and white sandstone interfinger , the advisibility of using two names is questioned .”
    
The Lexicon of Geologic Names of the United States for 1936-1960, followed  Fisher:
Keeseville Sandstone
Upper Cambrian(?): Northern New York.
Original reference: E. Emmons, 1841, New York Geol. Survey 5th Rept., p.    130, 131.
D. W. Fisher, 1956, Internat. Geol. Cong., 20th, Mexico, Cambrian Symposium, pt. 2, p. 333. Although Emmons (1841) treated Keeseville sandstone as variety of Potsdam sandstone, name was later revived for upper predominantly white part of the Potsdam, and name Potsdam was restricted to lower, largely red, part (Chadwick, 1920, New York State Mus. Bull. 217–218). Because reddish and white sandstone interfinger, advisability  of using two names is questioned. Not considered valid name.
Ausable Sandstone
Upper Cambrian: Eastern New York.
Original reference: H. I. Alling, 1919, New York State Mus. Bull. 207, 208, p. 113-145.
D. W. Fisher, 1956, Internat. Geol. Cong., 20th, Mexico, Cambrian Symposium, pt. 2, p. 329. Name was briefly mentioned by Alling (1919), and never since used, for basal Potsdam underlying the white Potsdam or "Keeseville" sandstone. Probably not valid unit."
    
Fisher (1968) resurrected the names Ausable and Keeseville, when he subdivided the Potsdam into three units:
[Page 15:] “Three lithologic types ( facies ) of Potsdam  
1 Basal  member Allen Falls of Kryning (1943); Nichoville of Postel, Nelson and Wiesnet (1959) maroon or dusky red    Hematitic, feldspathic , micaceous, quartzose sandstone having high accessory mineral content; some maroon shale interbeds.
2 Ausable Member - highly crosslaminated orange pink to pale red very coarse to medium grained arkose (feldspathic sandstone) with quartzose green shale seams and conglomeratic lenses.
3 Keeseville Member pinkish gray to very pale orange regular bedded, clay deficient , quartz sandstone, only slightly feldspathic”

Dennison ‘s  1982 Summary of Previous Work on the Potsdam


In 1982 John Dennison wrote a report entitled ‘Uranium favorability of nonmarine and marginal-marine strata of late Precambrian and Paleozoic age in Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York .’    A  chapter (pages 79-89) in the report summarizes previous work on the Potsdam sandstone from Emmons (1838, 1842)  to Selleck (1975).    I don’t believe that this has ever been cited  as a reference for the Potsdam.  It is worth reading.  

Wilmarth’s (1938) Lexicon of Geologic Names of the United States also provides a good summary of the use of the terms Potsdam Sandstone, Keeseville sandstone and Ausable sandstone.

Regards,
Christopher  Brett
Ottawa, Ontario

References and Suggested Reading

Arnott,  R.W.C., 2012
 Three day field trip to  Potsdam Group outcrops, Unpublished.  4 pages. 30 stops.

Blumberg, E., Chiarenzelli, J.R., Husinec, A., and Rygel, M., 2008,
 Insight from cores in the Potsdam Group, northern New York: Geological Society of America, Abstracts with Programs, Northeastern Section, v. 40, p. 82.
https://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2008NE/webprogram/Paper134416.html
Northeastern Section - 43rd Annual Meeting (27-29 March 2008)

Cass, John I. , 1979
Paleoenvironmental interpretation of the Beekmantown Group within the Ottawa Basin. Thesis, Master of Science, University of Ottawa.  189 pages plus 90 page Appendix. https://ruor.uottawa.ca/bitstream/10393/8394/1/MK43988.PDF
http://hdl.handle.net/10393/8394

Dennison, John M., 1982
Potsdam Sandstone, chapter (pages 79-89) in Uranium favorability of nonmarine and marginal-marine strata of late Precambrian and Paleozoic age in Ohio, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York .     https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc1202671/

Donaldson, Allan & Chris Findlay, 2008
Geotour  of Frontenac Arch Biosphere Reserve. Sunday, October 5, 2008 Friends of Canadian Geoheritage


Engelder, J. T. And Sbar, Marc L., 1976
Evidence for uniform strain orientation in the potsdam sandstone, Northern New York, from in situ measurements. Journal of Geophysical Research , vol 81, No. 17, 3013-3017

Fisher, D. W., 1956
The Cambrian system of New York State; Cambrian Symposium, 20th International Geological Congress, Mexico City, p. 321-351.  El sistema Cámbrico, su paleogeografía y el problema de su base : symposium
    
Fisher, D. W.,  1968
Geology of the Plattsburg and Rouses Point New York-Vermont Quadrangles: N.Y. St. Mus. Sci. Serv., Map and Chart Ser., Not 10, 51 p
    
Fisher, D.W., 1977
Correlation of the Hadrynian, Cambrian and Ordovician rocks in New York State: New York State Museum, Map and Chart Series no. 25, 75 p

Globensky, Yvon, 1986
Géologie de la région de Saint-Chrysostome et de Lachine (sud). Gouvernement du Québec , Ministère de l'Energie et des Ressources, Direction générale de l'Exploration géologique et minérale  MM 84-02
http://gq.mines.gouv.qc.ca/documents/EXAMINE/MM8402/MM8402.pdf
    
Hagadorn, James W.  and Edward S. Belt, 2008
Stranded in Upstate New York: Cambrian Scyphomedusae from the Potsdam Sandstone PALAIOS Vol. 23, No. 7/8 (Jul. - Aug., 2008), pp. 424-441  

Hagadorn, J.W.,  J.H. Collette, E.S. Belt, 2010
 Eolian-aquatic deposits and faunas of the middle Cambrian Potsdam Group. Palaios 26 (5), 314-334   a suite of interfingering eolian dune and aquatic deposits

Husinec, Antun, 2020a
 "Potsdam Sandstone" on YouTube
https://youtu.be/LhvHYVSsG6I    Time: 13:37    22 Aug 2020
This video was filmed for the Sedimentology Virtual Lab, St. Lawrence University during the COVID-19 pandemic.  

Husinec, Antun, 2020b
 “Potsdam Sandstone Eolian Deposits" on YouTube
 https://youtu.be/fN7hOY9l7y4    Time:    7:47.   Sept 4,  2020
This video was filmed as a part of the Sedimentology Virtual Lab series during the COVID-19 pandemic.   

Husinec,  Antun and J Allan Donaldson,  2014
Lower Paleozoic Sedimentary Succession of the St. Lawrence River Valley, New York and Ontario, in: Geology of the Northwestern Adirondacks and St. Lawrence River Valley (pp.1-28)  86th NEGSA Annual Meeting Field Guidebook, Chapter: A-1. Publisher: New York State Geological Association

Keroher, Grace C. and others, 1966
Lexicon of Geologic Names of the United States for 1936-1960
Bulletin 1200. USGS    https://doi.org/10.3133/b1200 

Keith, M. L., 1948
Sandstone as a Source of Silica Sands in Southeastern Ontario, with map No. 1946-9, part V in
Fifty-fifth Annual Report of the Ontario Department of Mines ,  being Vol. LV, 1946, 36 pages plus five detailed maps 


Landing, Ed, 2012
The Great American Carbonate Bank in Eastern Laurentia: Its Births, Deaths, and linkage to Paleooceanic Oxygenation (Early Cambrian-Late Ordovician), pages 451-492 in The Great American Carbonate Bank: The Geology and Economic Resources of the Cambrian– Ordovician Sauk Megasequence of Laurentia.  Edited by   James Derby, Richard Fritz, Susan Longacre, William Morgan, Charles Sternbach.  Memoir 78, American Association of Petroleum Geologists        

Li L. And  Ji S., 2020
A new interpretation for formation of orthogonal joints in quartz sandstone.   Journal of Rock Mechanics and Geotechnical Engineering https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrmge.2020.08.003
“an anatomic investigation on the orthogonal joints in the Potsdam sandstone of Cambrian age at Ausable Chasm (New York State, USA) and Beauharnois (Quebec, Canada.”

Lowe, David G., 2016
 Sedimentology, Stratigraphic Evolution a and Provenance of the Cambrian – Lower Ordovician Potsdam Group in the Ottawa Embayment and Quebec Basin.  Doctoral Thesis submitted to the University of Ottawa, 435 pages
http://hdl.handle.net/10393/35303   http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-261
    
Lowe, David G., Arnott, R.W.C., Chiarenzelli, J.R., and Rainbird, R.H., 2018,
Early Paleozoic rifting and reactivation of a passive-margin rift: Insights from detrital zircon provenance signatures of the Potsdam Group, Ottawa graben: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 130, no. 7/8, p. 1377–1396, https:// doi .org /10.1130 /B31749 .1 .

Lowe, David G.;  Arnott, R.W.C.; Nowlan, G.; McCracken, A.D., 2017
Lithostratigraphic and allostratigraphic framework  of the  Cambrian-Ordovician Potsdam Group and correlations  across Early Paleozoic southern Laurentia.  Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences  2017, 54(5): 550-585, https://doi.org/10.1139/cjes-2016-0151
            
McRae, Lee E., 1985
Sedimentology and paleomagnetics of the basal Potsdam Sandstone in the Adirondack border region, New York State, southwestern Quebec, and southeastern Ontario: Unpublished M.Sc. thesis, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, 178 p.
        
McRae, Lee Ellen, 1989  
Chronostratigraphic variability in fluvial sequences as revealed by paleomagnetic isochrons: examples in Miocene strata from a central Andean intermontane basin (Salla, Bolivia) and the northwest Himalayan foreland (lower Siwalik Group, Chinji Formation, Pakistan. (xvi, 252.  Doctoral Thesis. Dartmouth College

McRae, Lee E.  And G. D. Johnson, 1986
Sedimentology of Basal Potsdam Sandstone in Adirondack Border Region, New York, Southeastern Ontario, and Southwestern Quebec.  AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91043 1986 AAPG Annual Convention, Atlanta, Georgia, June 15-18, 1986.
http://www.searchanddiscovery.com/abstracts/html/1986/annual/abstracts/0619d.htm

McRae, L., Johnson, G., and Johnson, N., 1986,
 Temporal reevaluation of late Hadrynian non-marine facies in the Adirondack border region, New York State, southeastern Ontario and southwestern  Quebec; Abstracts with Programs, Geology Society of America, 18, 1, p. 54

Sanford, B. V., 2007
Stratigraphic and structural framework of the Potsdam Group in eastern Ontario, western Quebec and northern New York. Doctoral Thesis submitted to the University of Ottawa
http://hdl.handle.net/10393/29694
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-13101

Sanford, B.V. and R.W.C. Arnott, 2010
Stratigraphic and structural framework of the Potsdam Group in eastern Ontario, western Quebec and northern New York State, GSC Bulletin 597

Schmerber, G. And  Morizet, M. 1971
Etude sédimentologique: I - Les grès de Potsdam; II - Les dépôts de Kamouraska; Ministère des
Richesses naturelles, Québec, unpublished manuscript (In French)
https://gq.mines.gouv.qc.ca/documents/EXAMINE/SOQ02125/SOQ02125.pdf

Selleck, Bruce  2008
Stratigraphy, sedimentology and diagenesis of the Potsdam Formation, Southern Lake Champlain Valley, New York .   Field Trip Guidebook for the 80th Annual Meeting of the  New York State Geological Association.  
http://www.nysga-online.net/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/2008_bookmarked.pdf
 
Williams,  D.A.  1991.  
Paleozoic  Geology  of  the  Ottawa-St.  Lawrence  Lowland,  Southern  Ontario;  Ontario  Geological  Survey,  Open  File  Report  5770,  292p.        

Williams, D. A. and Wolf,  R.R., 1984,
Paleozoic geology, Westport area, Southern Ontario. Ontario Geological Survey, Map P. 2723.

Wilmarth, M. Grace, 1938
Lexicon of Geologic Names of the United States. USGS Bulletin 896, Part , A-L. 

Wynne-Edwards, H R., 1967
Geology Westport, Ontario. Geological Survey of Canada, "A" Series Map 1182A.  Paleozoic Geology by M. E. Wilson, 1928, 1929; G. M. Brownell, 1927, 1928.  Precambrian geology by H. R.   Wynne-Edwards,   1957. 1958  doi:10.4095/108032

Tuesday, 1 June 2021

What's New in Potsdam Sandstone?

 Not much.   Li and Ji (2020) investigated the orthogonal joints in the Potsdam sandstone  at Ausable Chasm (New York State) and Beauharnois (Quebec) and Professor Antun Husinec (2020 a, b) at St. Lawrence University has published two Youtube videos on the Potsdam sandstone.     Below I have provided links to that  recent paper  and to the  two Youtube videos on the Potsdam sandstone published in 2020 by Antun Husinec.  While the outcrops in the videos are referenced and figured in numerous field trip guides (e.g., Husinec and Donaldson,  2014;  Lowe,  2014;  Selleck, Arnott, and Sanford, 2010)  and peer reviewed articles,  the videos  are  impressive.

Both videos were  filmed for the Sedimentology Virtual Lab, St. Lawrence University during the COVID-19 pandemic, by  Antun Husinec, Professor of Geology, St. Lawrence University, New York State.   The first video, entitled ‘"Potsdam Sandstone" shows four outcrops:  the first outcrop is a mile and half from Alexandria Bay with great shots of a nonconformity;  the second outcrop [7:30] is  at Goose Bay a mile and half northeast of previous outcrop; the third outcrop [9:38] is at Schermerhorn  landing   and shows  an unconformity within the Potsdam; the fourth outcrop [11:19] is at Chippewa Bay with U shaped burrows, disconformably overlain by  theTheresa formation.   The second video entitled “Potsdam Sandstone Eolian Deposits" has great shots of eolian dunes in the sandstone.

Interestingly,  Professor George Dix of Carleton University’s  Earth Sciences Department has also prepared a series of Virtual Sedimentary Geology Field Trips [see: https://newsroom.carleton.ca/story/virtual-sedimentary-geology-field-trips/ ]. The only one that I can find on the web is a short [2:56 ; 7 Oct 2020] video on the Theresa Formation.   In that video he mentions that there is one on the Keeseville, but I cannot locate it.
 
Li and Ji (2020) observed  that at both sites the  orthogonal joints in the Potsdam sandstone “are organized essentially in grid-lock pattern, rather than ladder-pattern .  Mutual abutting/cutting relationships (e.g. both sets of joints abut each other) indicate that the orthogonal joints are geologically coeval extension fractures.  Each set of orthogonal joints displays a uniform strike, and is straight and continuous over several meters. ...  Furthermore, these joints are opening-mode fractures and display no detectable shear displacement along them.  No joints contain detectable mineral fill indicating that brittle fracturing occurred at shallow depths where temperature was so low that the solubility of quartz or calcite was too low to form veins along the joints...”  [citations omitted].  They concluded that the “sandstone beds stretched in the direction not only parallel but also perpendicular to the maximum tensile stress (s3) direction in the flat-lying layers, forming closely-spaced fracture set J1 and widely-spaced fracture set J2. ... [and that the  vertical orthogonal joints resulted]   “from the auxetic effects of quartz-rich sandstone in the absence of local or regional stress rotation.”

Below I've listed papers from 2016 to 2019 that I've mentioned in footnotes to earlier blog posts.


Christopher  Brett
Ottawa, Ontario

References and Suggested Reading

Brink R., Mehrtens C., Maguire H., 2019
Sedimentology and petrography of a lower Cambrian transgressive sequence: Altona Formation (Potsdam Group) in northeastern New York.  Bulletin of Geosciences, 94, 369-388
http://www.geology.cz/bulletin/contents/art1728
 
Dashtgard, S. E., Vaucher, R., Yang, B., & Dalrymple, R. W. , 2021
Hutchison Medallist 1. Wave-Dominated to Tide-Dominated Coastal Systems: A Unifying Model for Tidal Shorefaces and Refinement of the Coastal- Environments Classification Scheme. Geoscience Canada, 48(1), 5–22. https://doi.org/10.12789/geocanj.2021.48.171
 [Free download]

Dix, George, 2020
Theresa Formation  (Marine Shoreface).  A YouTube video [2:56 minutes ; 7 Oct 2020]  
https://youtu.be/EJz12HnOEg0

Engelder, J. T. And Sbar, Marc L., 1976
Evidence for uniform strain orientation in the potsdam sandstone, Northern New York, from in situ measurements.  Journal of Geophysical Research , vol 81, No. 17, 3013-3017

Husinec, Antun, 2020a
 "Potsdam Sandstone" on YouTube
https://youtu.be/LhvHYVSsG6I    Time: 13:37 minutes.    22 Aug 2020
This video was filmed for the Sedimentology Virtual Lab, St. Lawrence University during the COVID-19 pandemic.  

Husinec, Antun, 2020b
 “Potsdam Sandstone Eolian Deposits" on YouTube
 https://youtu.be/fN7hOY9l7y4    Time:    7:47 minutes.   Sept 4,  2020
This video was filmed as a part of the Sedimentology Virtual Lab series during the COVID-19 pandemic.  

Husinec,  Antun and J. Allan Donaldson,  2014
Lower Paleozoic Sedimentary Succession of the St. Lawrence River Valley, New York and Ontario, in : Geology of the Northwestern Adirondacks and St. Lawrence River Valley (pp.1-28)  86th NEGSA Annual Meeting Field Guidebook, Chapter: A-1. Publisher: New York State Geological Association

Landing, E., Salad Hersi, O.,  Amati, L., Westrop, S.R., Franzi, D.A., 2019
Early Paleozoic rifting and reactivation of a passive-margin rift: Insights from detrital zircon provenance signatures of the Potsdam Group, Ottawa graben: Comment. GSA Bulletin; March/April 2019; v. 131; no. 3/4; p. 695–698; https://doi.org/10.1130/B35104.1; published online 25 January 2019.

Li L. And,  Ji S., 2020
A new interpretation for formation of orthogonal joints in quartz sandstone.   Journal of Rock Mechanics and Geotechnical Engineering
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrmge.2020.08.003
“an anatomic investigation on the orthogonal joints in the Potsdam sandstone of Cambrian age at Ausable Chasm (New York State, USA) and Beauharnois (Quebec, Canada.”


Lowe, David G.,  2014.
Stratigraphy and Terrestrial to Shallow Marine Environments of the Potsdam Group in the Southwestern Ottawa Embayment. In Geology of the Northwestern Adirondacks and St. Lawrence River Valley, New York State Geological Association 86th annual meeting guidebook, pp. 183–203

Lowe, David G., 2016
Lower Ordovician Potsdam Group in the Ottawa Embayment and Provenance of the Cambrian – Lower. Ordovician Potsdam Group in the Ottawa. Embayment and Quebec Basin. David G. Lowe. Doctoral Thesis submitted to the University of Ottawa
http://hdl.handle.net/10393/35303
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-261

Lowe, David G, and R.W.C. Arnott, 2016
 Composition and Architecture of Braided and Sheetflood-Dominated Ephemeral Fluvial Strata In the Cambrian–Ordovician Potsdam Group: A Case Example of the Morphodynamics of Early Phanerozoic Fluvial Systems and Climate Change.  Journal of Sedimentary Research, v. 86, i. 6, p. 587-612, Published in June 2016, doi:10.2110/jsr.2016.39  

Lowe, D.G., Arnott, R.W.C., Chiarenzelli, J.R., and Rainbird, R.H., 2018,
Early Paleozoic rifting and reactivation of a passive-margin rift: Insights from detrital zircon provenance signatures of the Potsdam Group, Ottawa graben: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 130, no. 7/8, p. 1377–1396, https:// doi .org /10.1130 /B31749 .1 .

Lowe, D.G., Arnott, R.W.C., Chiarenzelli, J.R., and Rainbird, R.H., 2019,
Early Paleozoic rifting and reactivation of a passive-margin rift: Insights from detrital zircon provenance signatures of the Potsdam Group, Ottawa graben: Reply. Geological Society of America Bulletin, March/April 2019, v. 131, no. 3/4, pages 699-703; published online January 25, 2019.  https://pubs.geoscienceworld.org/gsa/gsabulletin/article/131/3-4/699/568492/Early-Paleozoic-rifting-and-reactivation-of-a

Lowe, David G.;  Arnott, R.W.C.;  Nowlan, G.; McCracken, A.D., 2017
Lithostratigraphic and allostratigraphic framework  of the  Cambrian-Ordovician Potsdam Group and correlations  across Early Paleozoic southern Laurentia.  Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences  2017, 54(5): 550-585, https://doi.org/10.1139/cjes-2016-0151

MacNaughton, Robert B. ,  James W. Hagadorn, Robert H. Dott Jr, 2019
Cambrian wave-dominated tidal-flat deposits, central Wisconsin, USA
Sedimentology, Volume 66, Issue5, August 2019, Pages 1643-1672
https://doi.org/10.1111/sed.12546

McMahon,William J.,  A. G. Liu, B. H. Tindal, and M. G. Kleinhans, 2020
Ediacaran life close to land: coastal and shoreface habitats of the Ediacaran macrobiota, the central Flinders Ranges, South Australia .  Journal of Sedimentary Research, 2020, v. 90, 1463–1499     https://doi.org/10.2110/jsr.2020.029
 

[Attributed to]  Selleck, B., Arnott,  R.W.C. and Sanford, B. V., 2010
 Potsdam Formation Field Excursion, July 22-25, 2010, Thousand Island Region and St. Lawrence Lowlands.  Colgate University.

Monday, 3 May 2021

John Finch’s (1833) and Captain R. H. Bonnycastle’s (1833, 1836) reports of Basaltiform Lithographic Limestone at Murney's Point, Kingston, Upper Canada

 In my last posting I provided numerous references to columnar sedimentary rocks where the columns resemble the columnar structure of basalt.   When I wrote that posting I believed that William Logan (1850, 1863) was the first to report on columnar structures in sedimentary rocks in Canada.  Since then I have determined that both John Finch (1833) and Captain R. H. Bonnycastle  (1833, 1836) reported on horizontal, basaltiform, lithographic limestone at Murney's Point, Kingston, Upper Canada (now, Ontario).   

The word ‘basaltiform’ is not an adjective that is much used these days.  It means ‘like basalt in form: columnar’, and was not uncommon in geological papers in the nineteenth century (e.g., Dawson, 1855, page 63; Gesner, 1836, page 211) .  ‘Lithographic limestone’ was originally defined as a hard limestone that is sufficiently fine-grained, homogeneous and defect free to be used for lithography (a method of printing where an image was drawn with greasy chalk onto the surface of a smooth limestone plate;  the stone was subsequently moistened but only the parts not covered by the grease absorbed the water; an oil-based ink would be applied, repelled by the water, sticking only to the original drawing; the ink would be transferred to a blank paper sheet, producing a printed page).  Today geologists use the term lithographic to refer to carbonate rocks with a grain size under 1/250 mm.  What is interesting about John Finch’s  and Captain R. H. Bonnycastle’s reports is that the columns in the limestone were horizontal and that the stone was used in lithography.

John Finch was an English geologist who visited North America from 1823 to 1831.  In 1833 he published a  book describing his travels in the United States of America and Canada with comments on geology and minerals.   In the book  he mentions that he visited Kingston, Upper Canada, a town of “about five thousand inhabitants,” where he noted:.

“A very remarkable geological fact ..., one mile west of the  town. Limestone of the upper transition formation is crystallized in the form of basaltic columns. The stratum of limestone is three feet in thickness. The columns are usually octagonal, and vary in length from six inches to three feet. It may be called basaltiform limestone. The mountain at Montreal exhibits a similar arrangement, but on a larger scale, and the columns are there vertical. At Kingston they are horizontal.”

Captain R. H. Bonnycastle was a member of the Royal Engineers stationed in Kingston, Upper Canada who had an interest in geology.   He authored a  paper on the geology around Kingston that was published in the American Journal of Science in four parts published in 1830, 1831, 1833 and 1836.   In the third part of this paper, published in 1833, he mentions (at pages 102-104) that Mr. John Finch had been in Kingston “employed on a course of mineralogical lectures” and had discovered that several of the limestone beds of the Cataraqui Formation “were  regularly divided into prismatic forms, by a species of huge crystallization, resembling that exhibited  by basalt, but always in a horizontal position. ... , regularly formed into almost interminable horizontal columns of an hexangular or octagonal shape, not jointed or connected by a cup and socket, as those of basalt often are, but irregularly, disunited only by occasional rents, evidently the result of the action of time, or of unequal coherency.”  

Bonnycastle comments (1833, page 103)  that this occurred  at a number of localities at Kingston, noting that “the octagons, which are the most usual forms, as at Murney's Point, the upper and lower, as well as the vertical sides are straight and almost or quite equal, whilst the angular faces are slightly concave and much less in size.” 

Bonnycastle also notes (1833, page 104) that the  basaltiform limestone “is an excellent lithographic stone for all the common processes of that admirable art, and is now extensively employed in the surveyor general's office at York, under the management of Mr. S. O. Tazewell,  ... This lithographic limestone is darker than the usual beds of the Cataraqui formation, and I have not seen any fossils in  it ; it is very compact and hard, and, if kept at a good temperature, bears the press better than the German stone.”

Bonnycastle  (1836) included a lithograph showing the basaltiform limestone made from two of Bonnycastle’s drawings and printed by Tazewell on lithographic limestone.   He commented (Vol 30, 1836, page 233) “These drawings represent the basaltiform lithographic limestone of Kingston, as viewed at two points, near the western end of the town.  The upper one, shews the beds, as they appear from the edge of  the water forming the bank; the under one, the beds viewed at their extremities, left open by quarrying, and in this view the octagonal figure is completely displayed.”    The drawing is produced below.


The lithograph bears the title of the article “Transition Rocks of the Cataraqui’ above the drawing, and under the drawing bears the words: - From Drawing by Captn. Bonnycastle R. E.;
- Basaltiform Lithographic Limestone of Kingston U.C. near Nickall’s Hop Ground; - Tazewell, lithr from Canadian Stone; - York U.C. 1833.

I have been unable to locate any other reference to Nickall’s Hop Ground, Kingston, Upper Canada, though I did find an 1833 mention of John Nickall’s brewery in Kingston.

Bonnycastle mentioned that the the octagons are the most usual forms at Murney's Point. The location of Murney’s Point will be familiar to everyone who has lived in Kingston, to everyone who has attended Queen’s University, and to many tourist who have visited Kingston, as a Martello Tower was built on the point in 1846, and since 1925 the Murney Tower Museum has been a tourist attraction in Kingston.   I can recall walking across and sitting on the outcrops at Murney’s Point while at Queen’s University and on numerous visits to Kingston.  Below is an extract from Google Maps, Satellite View, showing the location of the Martello Tower and the outcrops.  The outcrops are along the shore of Lake Ontario between the Murney Tower and the Richardson Bath House.


Carson (1982; Map P2496) of the Ontario Geological Survey mapped the Paleozoic geology of this part of Kingston and assigned three outcrops at Murney’s Point to the Ordovician Gull River Formation (middle member).  In the legend to his map he states that “The middle member is characterized by pale to dark grey and medium to dark brown lithographic to sublithographic lime stone interbedded with pale brown and pale green calcareous or dolomitic siltstone that weathers pale green and buff. Stylolites and calcite-filled vugs are common ....  Shaly limestone and silty limestone also occur in minor amounts.”

Should the COVID lockdown be lifted and I visit Kingston again, I will be sure to visit Murney’s Point and look more closely at the outcrops.

Captain R. H. Bonnycastle, Royal Engineers ( 1791 – 1847)

The best descriptions of Captain R. H. Bonnycastle’s life are found in  Chichester (1900) and Raudzens , (1988).   He was a military engineer, army officer, artist, and author, with an interest in geology.

He studied at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, England, becoming a lieutenant of the royal engineers. He served in the Napoleonic Wars and in the War of 1812 acting as engineer in charge of fortifications erected by the British on the Castine peninsula, Maine.   He attained the rank of captain in 1814.  Raudzens (1988) states that “In 1826 he was sent to Upper Canada, serving at Fort George (Niagara-on-the-Lake) and Kingston until 1832, when he was posted to York (Toronto).  ...  In 1837 he was promoted brevet major and placed in command of the engineers at Kingston, with the specific task of completing construction of the new Fort Henry, begun in 1832. By late 1837 Bonnycastle, directing a force of mostly Irish artisans and labourers, had finished work. Almost immediately afterwards came the rebellions in the Canadas.”  Captain  Bonnycastle is credited with assembling and arming a  force of militia and volunteers which deterred an attack.  In March 1840 was knighted for his efforts.  He was promoted a regimental lieutenant-colonel in 1840, did a tour of duty as commanding engineer in Newfoundland,  and retired  in 1847. He died in 1848 at Kingston.    

Bonnycastle published two articles on geology, the one noted above and 1829 article on the rocks and minerals of Upper Canada,  and also described the geology of Newfoundland in a chapter in a book (1842) he wrote on that province.   He was a prolific author, writing two books on Spanish America and numerous books on Canada.  His works are listed below.

John Finch (1791-1854)

The best descriptions of John Finch’s life are found in Neitzke-Adamo et al. (2018) and Rail (2012).

John Finch was an English geologist, not a Scot as stated in various sources.   John Finch was born at Heath-Forge, Wombourne, Staffordshire, and appears to have spent the majority of his life in the West Midlands area of England.

He visited and traveled in North America from 1823 to 1831 (or 1833).   While in North America John Finch gave several series of lectures on geology and mineralogy, including a series in Boston in 1823 (Rail, 2012), at Philadelphia, Pa. in 1823,  in Baltimore, Maryland in 1824 (Rail, 2012),  at Princeton in 1825 (Young,  2019), at Wilmington, Delaware in 1827, at Hartford, Connecticut in 1829, lectures at Columbia and Yale, and  fifteen geological lectures Rutgers in 1829 (Neitzke-Adamo, 2018).   Kuntz (2010) mentions that in 1830 and 1833 John Finch gave lectures on geology  in Montreal and that the 1830 series of sixteen  lectures  on geology were sponsored by the Natural History Society of Montreal  illustrated  by drawings  and specimens,  which was  "fashionably  and numerously attended"  "by  nearly  50  gentlemen  and about  30  ladies”.  Bonnycastle (1833) reports that Finch visited Kingston to deliver lectures on Mineralogy. Based on Gundy’s (2003) history of Tazewell’s use of the Kingston Lithographic stone in 1831, it appears that Finch must have visited Kingston in 1831 or earlier.
 
While John Finch described himself as Fellow of the Philosophical Society of Birmingham, and Professor of Geology and Mineralogy, Rail (2012) notes that John Finch was a  “member of the Birmingham Philosophical Institution, and sometimes, rather grandly, signed himself 'Fellow of the Philosophical Society of Birmingham', and, 'F.B.S.' He was never admitted to a fellowship of the Geological Society.”  I could not find that John Finch was associated with any university or college, and suspect that John Finch employed the term "professor" to mean "one who teaches a branch of knowledge" or “a person who professes to be an expert in some art or science”.  On the title page  his 1833 book he inserted under this name “Cor. Mem. Nat. Hist. Soc. Montreal; Lit. & Hist. Soc. Quebec.  Hon Mem. West Point Lyceum; Delaware, West Chester, &c. &c.”

In the period from 1823 to 1833 Finch authored numerous articles that were published in Silliman's American Journal of Science and Arts, including seven on geology or mineralogy and at least six others.   Finch’s (1833) book ‘Travels in the United States of America and Canada’ also contained comments on the geology and mineralogy of those countries.

Finch is most often mentioned for his “Geological essay on the tertiary formations in America” published in 1823 and for his collection Tertiary fossils collected in North America.    Before Finch’s 1823 paper geologists in the United States referred to the whole Atlantic Coastal Plain as the “Alluvial Formation”.  Finch was the first to suggest that the ‘Alluvial’ was the equivalent to the Tertiary formations of Europe and elsewhere (see Berry, 1916).

Thomas Say (1824) described Finch's collection, identifying forty new species. Kenworthy and Santucci, (2003) note that “Say and the other scientists ... all mistakenly listed the  collecting  locality  for  Finch’s  fossils  as  coming  from  Saint  Mary’s  River,  Maryland” when in fact the specimens were collected from near Yorktown, Virginia.   Kenworthy and Santucci, (2003) identify the locality as the Pliocene Yorktown Formation (approximately 4.5 - 3 million years old).  Bullen (1902) reports that on returning to England “Mr. Finch offered his collection for purchase to the Trustees of the British Museum .... This offer was accepted, and on the conclusion of the usual preliminaries the collection became the property of the Museum at the close of the year 1834.”  As of 1902 only part of the collection could be found. 

Samuel Oliver Tazewell, Lithographer

The best descriptions of  Tazewell’s career as a lithographer are provided by McLeod (2014) and Gundy (2003).   McCleod mentions that “In January 1832, [Tazewell] produced the first map of the Town of Kingston on his lithographic press. .. .The prospect of winning a government contract through Surveyor General S.P. Hurd enticed the lithographer to move to York in late 1832. (York became Toronto in March 1834.) Tazewell received short-term jobs but he met with stiff competition and sharp criticism.  Draftsman James Grant Chewett of the Crown Lands Department drew expensive maps by hand. He considered lithographic maps unworthy, cheap substitutes for his elegant, detailed work. ... No government contracts were offered to the lithographer.”   Gundy notes that “Denied any government contracts .. .by September 1835 [Tazewell] had moved to St Catharines and taken up his old trade of jeweller, watchmaker, and piano tuner. He continued to produce the occasional lithograph”
 
Christopher Brett
Ottawa, Ontario


References and Suggested Reading


Allodi, Mary 1980
 Printmaking in Canada : the earliest views and portraits = Les débuts de l'estampe imprimée au Canada : vues et portraits. Toronto : Royal Ontario Museum.  xxviii, 244 p. : 28 cm
[Catalog of an exhibition held at the Royal Ontario Museum, with biographies of early engravers and printers such as Samuel Tazewell]
https://archive.org/details/printmakingincan0000allo/

Berry, Edward Wilber, 1916
The lower Eocene Floras of Southeastern North America, U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 91 , 591 pages  https://doi.org/10.3133/pp91
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/32005#page/609/mode/1up

Bonnycastle, Richard Henry , Captain, Royal Engineers, 1818
Spanish America, Vol. 1 (of 2). London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown, Paternoster-row 336 pages
https://archive.org/details/spanishamericao02bonngoog/page/n10/mode/2up

Bonnycastle, Richard Henry, Captain, Royal Engineers, 1818
Spanish America, Vol. 2 (of 2) . London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown, Paternoster-row 359 pages
https://archive.org/details/spanishamericao03bonngoog/page/n15/mode/2up

Bonnycastle, Richard Henry , Captain, Royal Engineers, 1819
Spanish America . Philadelphia: Abraham Small, 481 pages
https://archive.org/details/spanishamericaor00bonn 
 
Bonnycastle, R. H., Captain, 1829a
On account of some Meteorological Phenomena observed in Canada, by Captain Bonnycastle, R. E. In the years 1826-27;  Transactions of the Literary & Historical Society of Quebec. Volume 1, pages  47 -52
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/54240#page/103/mode/1up

Bonnycastle, R. H., Captain, R. E. 1829b
Desultory Observations on a few of the Rocks and Minerals of Upper Canada, by Captain Bonnycastle, R. E..  Transactions of the Literary & Historical Society of Quebec. Volume 1,  62 -70    https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/54240#page/118/mode/1up

Bonnycastle, R. H., Capt. R.E., 1830, 1831, 1833, 1836
On the Transition Rocks of the Cataraqui, American Journal of Science, Vol. 18, 1830, pp. 85-104;  Vol.  20, 1831, 74-82; Vol 24, 1833, 97-104;  Vol 30, 1836, 233-248 .

Bonnycastle, Richard Henry, Sir,  1842
The Canadas in 1841. London, Henry Colburn. Volume 1.
https://archive.org/details/canadasin184101bonn
page 57-59 geological character
  
 Bonnycastle, Richard Henry, Sir, 1842
Newfoundland in 1842: A sequel to “the Canadas in 1841.”  In two volumes, Vol. 1., 367 pages
London, Henry Colburn.  Chapter III, Geology and Geological Relations, pages 179-222
https://www.google.ca/books/edition/Newfoundland_in_1842/24wtAQAAMAAJ
https://archive.org/details/newfoundlandin00bonn/page/n13/mode/2up
Vol. 2, 351pages
https://archive.org/details/newfoundlandin1800bonn/page/8/mode/2up

 Bonnycastle, Richard Henry 1846
Canada and the Canadians, Volume I. London: Henry Colburn, 
https://www.gutenberg.org/files/20014/20014-h/20014-h.htm   [this is the new edition 1849]

 Bonnycastle , Richard Henry ,1849
 Canada and the Canadians, Volume II. London.

 Bonnycastle, Sir R . 1852
 Canada , As it was , is, and  may be.  London: Colburn & Co. , vol. 1, 315 pages
https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.173206
Volume 2 https://books.google.ca/books?id=eK4NAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA1

Bumsted, J.M., 2008
Sir Richard Henry Bonnycastle. The Canadian Encyclopedia
https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/sir-richard-henry-bonnycastle

Carson, D. M., 1982
Paleozoic Geology of the Gananoque-Wolfe Island Area, Southern Ontario, Ontario Geological Survey. Map P 2496. Geological Series - Preliminary Map. Scale 1:50000. Geology 1981.

Chichester, Henry Manners, 1900
Bonnycastle, Richard Henry. In Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Volume 05
London: Smith, Elder & Co.   http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio.php?id_nbr=3257

Dawson, Sir John William, 1855
Acadian Geology.  Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd. 388 pages

Finch, John, 1823 
Geological Essay on the Tertiary Formations in America, by John Finch, Fellow of the Philosophical Society of Birmingham, Professor of Geology and Mineralogy. {Read before the Academy of Natural Sciences, at Philadelphia. July 15, 1823.] Am J. Sc. 7, 31-43
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/53598#page/36/mode/1up

Finch, John, 1824a 
On the Celtic antiquities of America; by John Finch FBS, Professor of  Geology and Mineralogy, American journal of science and arts  vii, 149-61

Finch, John, 1824b 
A sketch on the  geology of the country near Easton, Penn.; with a Catalogue of Minerals, and a Map., Am J. Sc.  8: 236-240, map, 1824

Finch, John, 1824c
On the forts around Boston, which were erected during the War of Independence; by J Finch FBS, American journal of science, and arts. Volume viii, 338-48.

Finch, John, 1826a 
 Memoir on the New or Variegated Sandstone of the United States. Am J. Sc.  10, 209-212, 1826

Finch, John, 1826b 
 On the Tertiary formations on the borders of the Hudson River, Am J. Sc. 10, 227-229 1826

Finch, John, 1828a 
 On the geology and mineralogy of the country near West Chester, Penn.,  Am J. Sc. 14 , 15-18 

Finch, John, 1828b 
On the effect of the physical geography of the world, on the boundaries  of empires Pt I; by John Finch, MCS, &c, American journal of science  and arts  , xiv, 18-23.

Finch, John, 1828c
 On the atomic theory of chemistry; by John Finch, M.C.S., &c, American journal of science and arts  , xiv, 24-28.

Finch, John, 1828d
 On the effect of the physical geography of the world on the boundaries of empires Pt II; by John Finch, F.B.S., M.S.D., &c, &c, American journal of science and arts  , xvi, 99-111.

Finch, John, 1830a
Circular scale of equivalents; by J Finch, American journal of science and arts , xviii, 196-7.

Finch, John, 1830b
 Notice of a locality of Arragonite, near New Brunswick, (NJ);  American journal of science and arts, xviii, 197-8.  https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/97096#page/217/mode/1up

Finch, John, 1831
 On the mineralogy and geology of St. Lawrence County, State of New York, Am J. Sc. 19; 220-228  https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/54146#page/240/mode/1up

Finch, J., 1833
Travels in the United States of America and Canada, containing some account of their scientific institutions, and a few notices of the geology and mineralogy of those countries.  455 pp,  London:  Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longman
https://archive.org/details/travelsinunited01igoog/page/n10/mode/2up


Gesner, Abraham  1836
Remarks on the Geology and Mineralogy of Nova Scotia. Halifax, Nova Scotia: Gossip and Coade,  273 pages @- Page 211

H. P. Gundy, 2003
“Tazewell, Samuel Oliver,” in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 7, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003–, accessed May 1, 2021 http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/tazewell_samuel_oliver_7E.html

Kenworthy, Jason and  Vincent L. Santucci, 2003
Paleontological Resource Inventory and Monitoring Northeast Coastal and Barrier Network
http://npshistory.com/publications/paleontology/tic-d-340.pdf

Kuntz, Harry, 2010
Science Culture  in English-speaking  Montreal,   1815-1842 .  A Doctoral Thesis  in  The  Humanities ,  Concordia University

Logan William E., 1850
Geological Survey of Canada, Report of Progress for 1849-50.  Toronto: Lovell and
 Gibson.

Logan, William E.,  1863, 
Geology of Canada. Geological Survey of Canada, Report of Progress from its Commencement to 1863. Montreal: Dawson Brothers.  983 pages..

McLeod, Susanna 2014
 Tazewell put Kingston 'on the map'. The Whig Standard, March 5, 2014
 https://www.thewhig.com/2014/03/05/tazewell-put-kingston-on-the-map

Neitzke-Adamo, L., Blandford, A.J., Criscione, J., Olsson, R.K., and Gorder, E., 2018,
 The Rutgers Geology Museum: America’s first geology museum and the past 200 years of geoscience education, in  Rosenberg, G.D., and Clary, R.M., eds., Museums at the Forefront of the History and Philosophy of Geology: History Made, History in the Making: Geological Society of America Special Paper 535, p. 217–236, https://doi.org/10.1130/2018.2535(14)
The Geological Society of America.  Special Paper 535
https://geology.rutgers.edu/images/Neitzke-Adamo-et-al_2018.pdf

Newton, R. Bullen, 1902
List of Thomas Say's Types of Maryland (U.S.) Tertiary Mollusca in the British Museum.
Geological Magazine, New Series, Decade 4,  volume 9, 302-305
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/96113#page/347/mode/1up

Rail, Tony  2012
 Biographical notes for William Steill Brown (1800-1836) and his wife Eliza Finch (1795-1835), a granddaughter of Dr Joseph Priestley, with some genealogical notes of their descendants, and some biographical notes for John Finch (1791-1854).  Copy of MSS in Harris Manchester College Oxford, citation: Harris Manchester College Library and Archives, MSS, Biographical notes for William Steill Brown, 2012
https://archive.org/stream/BiographicalNotesForWilliamSteillBrown/WilliamSteillBrown_djvu.txt

Raudzens, G. K. , 1988
"Bonnycastle, Sir Richard Henry". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. VII (1836–1850) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio.php?id_nbr=3257

Say, Thomas, 1824
An account of some of the Fossil Shells of Maryland. By Thomas Say. Read July 20, 1824.
Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, volume 4, 124-155
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/79352#page/134/mode/1up

Torrens, H.S., 1990,
The transmission of ideas on the use of fossils in stratigraphic analysis  from  England  to  America  1800–1840:  Earth  Sciences  History,  v. 9, p. 108–117, [I did not read]
https://www.jstor.org/stable/24137066

Young, Davis A., 2019
Joseph Henry and Geology at Princeton.  Earth Sciences History (2019) 38 (2): 232–275.  https://doi.org/10.17704/1944-6178-38.2.232     

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