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Upper Eocene

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... depositional environment with giant oyster fossils present suggesting presence ... Large fossils such as oysters & byrozoans ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Upper Eocene


1
Upper Eocene
  • John Ariail

2
Introduction
  • Roughly 55.8 million year ago
  • Jacksonian Provenance
  • Upper and lower components separated by
    discontinuity that can be trace from eastern
    Miss. To central S.C.
  • Discontinuity from uplift of Piedmont and mild
    regression at lower Jacksonian boundary.
  • Divided into Ocala and Barnwell groups

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6
Barnwell Group
  • Clinchfield, Dry Branch, Tobacco Road Sandstone
    Formations
  • Series of Upper Eocene near shore to coastal
    marine, sandy deposits in the Fall Line Hills
    area of central to eastern GA and western SC
  • Grades downdip into Ocala Group
  • Mainly quartz sand, smaller amounts of clay,
    limestone, chert, siliceous fossils, and small
    bone fossils such as fish teeth
  • Highly permeable sands make up the Upper Three
    Runs Aquifer

7
Barnwell Group
  • Overlies Huber formation
  • Has smectite clays versus kalonitic of Huber
    Formation
  • Altamaha Formation (marginal marine) overlies
    Barnwell Group

8
Clinchfield Formation
  • Riggins Mill, Treadwell, Albion, Utley
    Limestone Members east of Ogechee River
  • Basal sand deposit of Barnwell group
  • Mainly medium-grained well-sorted unconsolidated
    calcareous fossiliferous sand.
  • Overlies the Oconee Group

9
Dry Branch Formation
  • Twiggs Clay, Irwington Sand, Griffins Landing
    Member
  • Overlies the Utely Limestone of Clinchfield Sand
    Formation
  • Shallow water, marine depositional environment
    with giant oyster fossils present suggesting
    presence of near shore environment with fresh
    water input
  • Three members interfinger suggesting near shore
    environment including bays, lagoons, beaches,
    tidal inlets, and oyster beds

10
Tobacco Road Sandstone Formation
  • Burrowed bioturbated, massive, poorly sorted,
    medium to coarse, pebbly, weathered sand
  • Extends from Houston County to SC with a northern
    limit of the Fall Line
  • Discontinuous bed of flat pebbles serve as marker
    for the basal contact with the Dry Branch
    Formation beneath it.
  • Coastal marine, beach, to back barrier
    depositional environment
  • Cross-bedded with presence of silicified sand
    dollars

11
Ocala Group
  • Ocmulgee, Tivola Limestone, Williston, Crystal
    River Formation
  • In the subsurface underlies more than 4/5s of
    Georgia coastal plain

12
Williston Crystal River Formations
  • Recognized in Southwestern GA, Wayne County in
    Eastern GA
  • Extends into Alabama
  • Williston Formation correlated with Moodys Branch
    Formation in Alabama
  • Williston - indurated, recrystalized limestone,
    less fossiliferous than lateral equivalent Tivola
    Limestone

13
Williston Crystal River Formations
  • Crystal River softer, less consolidated coarse
    fossiliferous limestone, foramifera rich
  • Lateral equivalents of Tivola Ocmulgee
  • Coincide with lower / upper Jacksonian boundary
  • Limestone lithology indicates minor sea
    regression and restricted marine conditions on
    continental shelf

14
Tivola Limestone
  • Byrozoan-rich, coarse, bioclastic limestone
  • Poor sorting of bioclastic debris
  • Large fossils such as oysters byrozoans
  • Areas have been removed by solution, leaving a
    brown clayey, cherty residium between Dry Branch
    Clinchfield Formations
  • Grades laterally to the east north into the
    Twiggs member of Dry Branch Formation

15
Ocmulgee Formation
  • Extends from Houston Pulaski Counties east as
    far as Savannah River
  • Slightly indurated, fossiliferous, very
    calcareous, granular limestone
  • Facies change laterally into the Tobacco Road
    Sandstone
  • Nearshore facies or subdivision of offshore Ocala
    Group
  • Used to be referred to as Cooper Marl, but is not
    the lateral equivalent of Cooper Marl in South
    Carolina

16
Conclusion
  • Upper Eocene deposits extend south of the Fall
    Line
  • Can be correlated from Mississippi to South
    Carolina
  • Largely shallow marine depositional environment
  • Dominated by a period of major transgression of
    the Jackson Sea with minor periods of regression
  • Major deposits are limestone, sandstone,
    calcareous sandstone

17
References
  • Herrick, S.M., Counts, H.H., (1968). Late
    Tertiary Stratigraphy of Eastern Georgia. U.S.
    Geological Survey, Water Resources Division,
    Atlanta, Georgia.
  • Herrick, S.M., (1971). Age and Correlation of
    the Clinchfield Sand in Georgia, Contributions
    To Stratigraphy. Geological Survey Bulletin
    1354-E.
  •  
  • Huddlestun, Paul F., Hetrick, John H., (1979).
    The Stratigraphy of the Barnwell Group of
    Georgia. Reprinted 1988 by the Georgia
    Geological Society.
  •  
  • Huddlestun, Paul F., Hetrick, John H., (1986).
    Upper Eocene Stratigraphy of Central and Eastern
    Georgia. Department of Natural Resources
    Environmental Protection Division Georgia
    Geologic Survey, Bulletin 95.
  • Huddlestun, Paul F., Summerour, Joseph H.,
    (1996). The Lithostratigraphic Framework of The
    Uppermost Cretaceous And Lower Tertiary of
    Eastern Burke County, Georgia. Department of
    Natural Resources Environmental Protection
    Division Georgia Geologic Survey, Bulletin 127.
  • Richards, Horace G., (1955). The Paleocene and
    Eocene of Geogia (Part 2 Upper Eocene). Georgia
    Geological Survey, Atlanta, Georgia.
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