On Some Thin Sections of the Lower Paleozoic and Mesozoic Rocks of Pennsylvania

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Persifor Frazer
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
2
File Size:
89 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1875

Abstract

IT was my intention to have directed the attention of the members of the Institute to a complete series of rocks representing the older and middle formations represented in Pennsylvania, but time has been insufficient for the purpose, and I have been unable, in the first attempts to reduce the sections of those rocks, which I have brought with me to this meeting, to the requisite thinness necessary for exhibiting the peculiarities of their constituent minerals. The rocks represented here belong to the various horizons already mentioned, and include gneiss, ferruginous gneiss, chlorite slate, quartzites, and hydro-mica slates, limestones, dolomites, ferruginous conglomerates, quartz conglomerates, "Potomac marble" (nether member of the Mesozoic series), dolerites, and a syenite. The order in which these are named is, roughly, the order -of geographical position in a section line from southeast to northwest, commencing at the intersection of the Northern Central Railroad with the Maryland line, and ending a few miles from the town of York, and a short distance within the marginal outcrop of Mesozoic red sandstone. In such a geographical section all the rocks above mentioned would be encountered in the given order except syenite, about which a few words are to be said in a moment. (But this is far from representing the rocks in their geological sequence.) There is nothing of unusual interest to present to your notice in these slates and quartzites. The limestones were carefully searched under 450 diameters microscopic power, but they show no signs of organic remains. One section of a fine-grained Triassic sandstone contains a very beau¬tifully banded plate of quartz. But the objects of greatest interest at present are the specimens of trap. The more fine-grained and compact traps were collected from
Citation

APA: Persifor Frazer  (1875)  On Some Thin Sections of the Lower Paleozoic and Mesozoic Rocks of Pennsylvania

MLA: Persifor Frazer On Some Thin Sections of the Lower Paleozoic and Mesozoic Rocks of Pennsylvania. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1875.

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