ABSTRACT
The carbonates of the Vermont Valley and the overlying rocks of
the Taconic sequence have been generally believed to lie on the
east limb of a major unfaulted syncline (Middlebury Synclinorium).
In this view a westward dipping, north-south trending basal
Taconic overthrust must be exposed somewhere along the eastern
margin of the Taconic Range.
In contrast, this study based on detailed mapping at the north end
of the Taconic Allochthon suggests that a folded overthrust
surface is only locally seen in fensters; more commonly the basal
obduction surface of the Taconic Allochthon has been truncated by
later cross-cutting thrust faults. In the study area these newly
recognized east dipping faults are the "Whipple Hollow Fault" and
the "Proctor Fault". These two faults postdate the initial Taconic
overthrust and must belong to the Champlain thrust system of which
another fault forms the frontal thrust of the Taconic thrust belt
towards the west. Where exposed the basal thrust is characterized
by a thick melange unit and isolated slivers of shelf carbonates.
The melange underlies wide areas which had previously been mapped
as part of the authochthonous shelf sequence. Other areas which
were also believed to represent these authochthonous phyllites
have been identified as characteristic black pelitic Taconic
lithologies. The redefined Taconic rocks also include typical
green and greenish gray phyllites of the Cambrian Bull Formation.
It indicates that the Middle Ordovician shale unit which
conformably to unconformably overlies the carbonate shelf west of
the Taconic Range is not yet, or perhaps only locally, exposed at
the present erosion level of the Vermont Valley. In addition the
easternmost equivalents of this unit must have been tectonically
removed and incorporated into the basal melange. Where a
lithological correlation with the Taconic stratigraphy is not
possible the remaining black phyllites are probably Middle
Ordovician in age; still these phyllites have been incorporated
into the overlying melange and must be viewed as allochthonous.
The rocks of the study area underwent a progressive deformation
path which can be subdivided into three different stages (D1 to
D3). During each stage a characteristic thrust system (T1 to T3)
was active. D1-deformation describes the stacking of the Taconic
lithologies in an accretionary imbricate fan thrust environment
(T1). This early deformation is associated with a prominent slaty
cleavage (S1). Large-scale F1-folds, if present, would be strongly
refolded and tightened so that they are not detectable. Obduction
of the composite T1-thrust stack onto the carbonate shelf resulted
into a small-scale imbricated T2-marble/phyllite schuppen
structure. The propagation of this duplex has produced large-scale
folds. F2-structures are associated with a main regional
crenulation cleavage (S2). Progressive shortening during
D3-deformation culminated in foreland directed thrust faults (T3).
A second crenulation cleavage (S3) is related to this late
thrusting event. The regional application of the observed thrust
geometry strongly suggests that the Middlebury Synclinorium is
unlikely to be an unfaulted structure. In particular this study
suggests major north/south trending, eastward dipping late thrust
faults for the entire length of the eastern Taconic margin and the
Vermont Valley. The "higher Taconic slices" are also believed to
be related to this period of thrusting; this out-of sequence
imbrication by later faults explains the existing "stacking
controversy" among Taconic geologists.
Bierbrauer, K., 1990. The geology of Taconic thrust sheets and
surrounding carbonates of the west central Vermont marble belt,
north of Rutland, Vermont. Unpublished MSc. thesis, State
University of New York at Albany. 105 pp., +ix; 1 folded plate
(map)
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE
Oversize (*) QE 40 Z899 1990 B54
MS thesis scanned
image pdf (11 MB)
Plate 1a - Geological
Map
of
the
North
end
of
the
Taconic
Allochthon
near
Florence, Vermont (map and legend)
(coloured
outcrop map, scale 1: 10,000) - 9MB pdf file
Plate 1b - Cross-sections
and
map
legend
-
North
end
of
the
Taconic
Allochthon
near
Florence, Vermont
(coloured
geological cross sections, scale 1: 10,000, and map key) - 5MB pdf
file
Return to MS Theses completed in the
Geological Sciences Program, University at Albany