Queenston Formation

Queenston Formation
Stratigraphic range: Maysvillian to Richmondian
Queenston Formation exposed at the Cheltenham Badlands
TypeGeological formation
UnderliesCataract Group and Clinton Formation
OverliesCincinnati Group/Georgian Bay Formation / Carlsbad Formation / Oswego Formation
ThicknessUp to 300 m (980 ft)
Lithology
PrimaryShale
OtherSiltstone, sandstone, limestone, gypsum
Location
RegionOhio, Southern Ontario
Western New York
Country Canada
 United States
Type section
Named forQueenston, Ontario
Named byJ. F. Caley
Year defined1940

The Queenston Formation is a geological formation of Upper Ordovician age (Maysvillian to Richmondian Stage), which outcrops in Ontario, Canada (along the northern and eastern flanks of the Niagara Escarpment, as well as east of Ottawa) and New York, United States (just south of Lake Ontario). A typical outcrop of the formation is exposed at Bronte Creek just south of the Queen Elizabeth Way.[1] The formation is a part of the Queenston Delta clastic wedge, formed as an erosional response to the Taconic Orogeny. Lithologically, the formation is dominated by red and grey shales with thin siltstone, limestone and sandstone interlayers. As materials, comprising the clastic wedge, become coarser in close proximity to the Taconic source rocks, siltstone and sandstone layers are predominant in New York.[2]

  1. ^ Brogly, P. J.; I. P. Martini; G. V. Middleton (1998). "The Queenston Formation: shale-dominated, mixed terrigenous-carbonate deposits of Upper Ordovician, semiarid, muddy shores in Ontario, Canada". Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences. 35 (6): 702–719. Bibcode:1998CaJES..35..702B. doi:10.1139/cjes-35-6-702.
  2. ^ "New York's Potential Disposal Formations" (PDF). Empire State Oil and Gas Information System. Retrieved 8 January 2011.