Can. J. Earth Sci. 35(1998), 702-719
THE QUEENSTON FORMATION: SHALE-DOMINATED, MIXED TERRIGENOUS-CARBONATE
DEPOSITS OF UPPER ORDOVICIAN, SEMIARID, MUDDY SHORES IN ONTARIO, CANADA
P.J. BROGLY1, I.P. MARTINI1 and G.V. MIDDLETON2
1Department of Land Resource Science, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON
N1G 2Wl, Canada
2School of Geography and Geology, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON L8S
4Ml, Canada
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The Upper Ordovician Queenston Formation constitutes the westernmost part of
the Taconic clastic wedge of eastern North America. In Ontario, the Queenston
Formation consists of a mixed terrigenous-carbonate succession composed
primarily of red silty shales, which are locally gypsiferous, alternating, in
the middle and lower parts of the formation, with thin grey shales, calcareous
siltstone and sandstone, and bioclastic limestone. Brachiopods, some ostracodes,
and, in the lower beds, bryozoans constitute the body fossil assemblage. Diplocraterion,
Skolithos, Chondrites, and occasional large vertical burrows of
unknown origin form the ichnofauna. Plane beds, ripple marks, and occasional
swaley and hummocky cross-stratifications are present in the calcareous units.
Mudcracks, gypsum nodules, occasional halite hopper casts, and gilgai-like
structures typically occur in horizons where shales alternate with siltstone and
limestone. These features are indicative of prograding muddy and storm- and
tide-affected shores. In southernmost Ontario, the upper part of the formation
is mostly composed of a red shale, with local recognizable shale-filled
channels. This shale is of paralic origin, and it is truncated by the
unconformity separating the Ordovician from the Silurian units in this region.
This last event may, in part, be related to a eustatic sea-level drop due to the
contemporaneous Saharan glaciation, if not exclusively due to tectonic
movements.