Kettle Point Formation

Kettle Point Formation
Stratigraphic range: Late Devonian
TypeGeological formation
UnderliesPleistocene glacial till or Mississippian Bedford Formation
OverliesHamilton Group
Thicknessaverage of 100 feet (30 m) to maximum of 360 feet (110 m) in drill holes
Lithology
Primarybituminous shales
Othershale and siltstone interbeds
Location
LocationKettle Point Park, Ontario
Regionsouthern Ontario
CountryCanada
Type section
Named forKettle Point, Ontario
Named byJ. F. Caley
LocationKettle Point Park, Ontario
Year defined1943
Coordinates43°10′59.41″N 82°1′3.11″W / 43.1831694°N 82.0175306°W / 43.1831694; -82.0175306
RegionSoutheast shore of Lake Huron
CountryOntario, Canada
Thickness at type section12 feet (3.7 m) exposed along shoreline

The Kettle Point Formation, also known as the Kettle Point (black) Shale, is a geologic formation that consists of thinly laminated, siliciclastic, organic-rich black shale with thin to thick interbeds of organic-poor mudstone. It is largely restricted to the subsurface of southwestern Ontario.[1][2]

The eponymous type location of the Kettle Point Formation is Kettle Point which is located on the southeast shore of Lake Huron, southwestern Ontario. Kettle Point is the sole significant, and relatively accessible, outcrop of this formation. The outcrop consists of a wave-cut bluff which is 6.5 feet (2.0 m) high. Along its length, the wave-cut bluff exposes 12 feet (3.7 m) of slightly tilted shale. Kettle Point was named for decimetre- to meter-sized, hemispherical to spheroidal authigenic carbonate concretions that erode out of the Kettle Point Formation. These concretions are locally called kettles due to their resemblance to cooking vessels used by European settlers.[2][3]

  1. ^ Russell, D.J., 1985. Depositional analysis of a black shale by using gamma-ray stratigraphy: The Upper Devonian Kettle Point Formation of Ontario. Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology, 33(2), pp.236-253.
  2. ^ a b Bingham-Koslowski, N., Tsujita, C., Jin, J. and Azmy, K., 2016. Widespread Late Devonian marine anoxia in eastern North America: a case study of the Kettle Point Formation black shale, southwestern Ontario. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 53(8), pp.837-855
  3. ^ Coniglio, M. and Cameron, J.S., 1990. Early diagenesis in a potential oil shale: evidence from calcite concretions in the Upper Devonian Kettle Point Formation, southwestern Ontario. Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology, 38(1), pp.64-77.