Misplaced Pages

Salina Group

Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Pleasant Mills Formation) Large Geologic Group
Salina Group
Stratigraphic range: Homerian-Přídolí
~430–420 Ma PreꞒ O S D C P T J K Pg N
Halite (Salina Group, Silurian; Detroit Salt Company mine, Detroit, Michigan, USA)
TypeGeological group
Unit ofCayugan Series
Sub-unitsAppalachian Basin & Michigan Basin

Illinois Basin

UnderliesHelderberg Group
OverliesLockport Group & Bloomsburg Formation
Lithology
PrimaryDolomite & Shale
OtherAnhydrite, Limestone, Gypsum & Halite
Location
RegionAppalachian Basin & Michigan Basin of eastern North America
CountryUnited States of America and Canada
Type section
Named forSalt found within the formation
Named byJames Dwight Dana

The Salina Group or Salina Formation is a Late Silurian-age, Stratigraphic unit of sedimentary rock that is found in Northeastern and Midwestern North America. Named for its Halite beds, the phrase "Salina Group" was first used as a descriptive term by James D. Dana in 1863.

Figure 1: Extent of the Silurian salt deposits in Michigan, Ohio, New York, and adjacent states

The Salina is an extensive formation. It ranges from West Virginia up through Pennsylvania into Ohio and then Michigan in the United States, and from Pennsylvania into New York. It is also found in the Canadian province of Ontario. (See Figure 1.)

The thickness of the Salina Group varies greatly within the two basins, ranging from 84 feet in the southwestern corner of Michigan to an estimated 5,000 feet in that state's Gladwin County.

This formation is of economic importance for salt mining, oil reservoir creation, gypsum mining, and potential natural gas storage. Research has also been done on the viability of storing radioactive waste in the salt beds of the Salina.

Description

The Salina Formation is composed chiefly of dolomite and shale, interbedded with anhydrite, gypsum, and salt.

Stratigraphy

Stratigraphically, the Salina is placed in the Late Silurian age and is the lower member of the Cayugan Series. It overlies predominantly the Lockport; in parts central to northeast Pennsylvania it overlies the Bloomsburg Formation. It also underlies the Helderberg Group.

Appalachian & Michigan Basins

Being a thick formation, the Salina has subunits, as well as letter designations for the different formations. The letters originate at the base (oldest) with the A unit to the stratigraphic top H unit (youngest) made up of Anhydrite.

During an extensive study in the state of Michigan, each unit was mapped. Unit A consists of dolomite and shaly dolomite, and is the bottom of the Vernon. Where the formation thickens, there may also be one or two large salt beds within the unit. Anhydrite can be found throughout this unit. Due to unit A having two salt or anhydrite beds, it is often divided into the A1 and A2, with A1 being the basal unit.

Unit B is another salt unit and marks the Middle Vernon. The percentage of salt can range from 90% to 100%. Thin dolomite beds run through this unit. In comparison, Unit C marks the top of the Vernon Formation. It is a shaly dolomite; however, it can range from pure shale to pure dolomite beds within the unit. Anhydrite can be prevalent within this unit as well.

Unit D, the bottom of the Syracuse formation, is almost pure salt. Some dolomite may also occur within this unit. It is the thinnest unit of the Salina, and is not always present.

Unit E consists of shale, but can include dolomitic shale and dolomite. Anhydrite may also be present within this unit and is also part of the Syracuse.

Unit F is the youngest and largest salt in the group, also known as the Syracuse Formation. Where thicker, the F has beds of salt separated by rock grading from shale to dolomite, often with anhydrite present especially in the shale.

Unit G is the Camillus, which consists of dolomite and anhydrite while unit H is known as the Bertie Formation. In the Michigan Basin, the Bertie is pinched out; the Bass Islands Formation makes up the upper most Salina.

Illinois Basin

Wabash Formation

Wabash Formation made up of the Liston Creek Member, Kenneth Limestone Member, Kokomo Limestone Member and the Mississinewa Shale member.

Pleasant Mills Formation

The Pleasant Mills Formation is made up of the Louisville Equivalent Member and Waldon Equivalent Member and Limberlost Dolomite Member. The Pleasant Mills Formation is equivalent to the entire "A Unit" in the Appalachian Basin.

Economic Resources

Carbonite and Evaporite deposits in North East United States

Salt

Salt mines and brine wells are located in Western New York, Northeast Ohio and Detroit, Michigan with Ohio's salt production predating European settlement of the area as Native Americans collected and processed brine from springs in several locations, including "salt licks" where minerals were deposited by brine seeping out of the ground. Licking County was named for this natural phenomenon. Mahoning County's name is derived from a Native American term "ma-hon-ink" meaning "at the lick."

Throughout the early 1800s, Ohio's salt demand exceeded its production from brine wells and licks. Oil and gas exploration facilitated the discovery of salt during the 1860s; however, it was not until 1886 when the Cleveland Rolling Mill was drilling its second natural gas well that it hit brine. The salt was located at a depth of approximately 1,900 feet.

By the 1890s, brine wells were drilled and operating in Cleveland. During this period, five salt-producing companies operated in Northeast Ohio. Sterling Morton built a salt mine at a depth of 1800 feet on Cleveland's east side and Clarence Foster examined drilling records from Standard Oil along Lake Erie.

Gypsum

Rock gypsum (gyprock) (Salina Group, Upper Silurian; Ottawa County, Ohio, USA)

In 1827, Gypsum was first identified in Michigan, near Grand Rapids. An Odawa man discovered it in a rock outcrop along Plaster Creek where it enters Grand River.

In 1838, Michigan's first state geologist, Douglass Houghton, arrived to select a site for salt mining and reported an abundance of gypsum in the area. That same year, he and Bela Hubbard discovered an outcrop of gypsum at the mouth of the Au Gres River in Saginaw Bay. In 1841, Daniel Ball and business partner Warren Granger built a mill to process gypsum in 1841; a mill built by Houghton and Hubbard in Alabaster, Michigan became operational in 1862.

Oil and Gas

The Salina serves as an oil reservoir formation along the Findlay Arch from Southwestern Michigan down into Northwest Ohio. Salt is not present along the Arch System.

Fossils

Algae

Medusaegraptus graminiformis (Ruedemann 1925)

Brachiopoda

Orbiculoidea bertiensis (Ruedemann)

Lingula semina (Ruedemann)

Coral

Cyathophyllum hydraulicum (Simpson)

Eurypterida

Eurypterus remipes (DeKay, 1825)

Archaeophonus eurypteroides (Kjellesvig-Waering 1966)

Proscorpius osborni (Whitfield 1885)

Paracarcinosoma scorpionis (Grote & Pitt)

Eurypterus lacustris (Harlan, 1834)

Erettopterus waylandsmithi (Kjellesvig-Waering & Caster 1955)

Waeringopterus cumberlandicus (Leutze, 1961)

Waeringopterus apfeli (Leutze, 1961)

Dolichopterus herkimerensis (Caster and Kjellesvig-Waering 1956)

Graptolithina

Ostracodes

Leperditia scalaris (Jones 1856)

Mollusca

Bivalvia

Megalomus canadensis (Hall, 1852)

Gastropoda

References

  1. Elowski, Ronald C. (1980). "GIMDL-RI25.PDF" (PDF). State of Michigan.
  2. Norris, Stanley E. (1978). "HYDROLOGIC ENVIRONMENT OF THE SILURIAN SALT DEPOSITS IN PARTS OF MICHIGAN, OHIO, AND NEW YORK" (PDF). United States Geological Survey.
  3. ^ Landes, Kenneth K. (1945). "THE SALINA AND BASS ISLAND ROCKS IN THE MICHIGAN BASIN". United States Geological Survey.
  4. Ells, Garland D. (April 1958). "PROGRESS REPORT NUMBER EIGHTEEN Notes on the Devonian-Silurian in the Subsurface of Southwest Michigan" (PDF). State of Michigan - michigan.gov.
  5. Stone, R.W (1920). "GYPSUM DEPOSITS OF THE UNITED STATES" (PDF). United States Geological Survey.
  6. Carter, Kristin M.; Patchen, Douglas G.; Moore, Jessica P.; Fakhari, Mohammad; Daft, Jr., Gary W.; Solis, Michael; Dunst, Brian J.; Anthony, Robin V.; Metz, Kyle (August 1, 2016 – July 31, 2017). "A Geological Study to Determine the Potential to Create an Appalachian Storage Hub for Natural Gas Liquids" (PDF). West Virginia Geological Survey.
  7. PIERCE, W. G.; RICH, E. I. (1962). "Summary of Rock Salt Deposits in the United States as Possible Storage Sites for Radioactive Waste Materials" (PDF). United States Geological Survey.
  8. Norris, Stanley E. (June 1978). "HYDROLOGIC ENVIRONMENT OF THE SILURIAN SALT DEPOSITS IN PARTS OF MICHIGAN, OHIO, AND NEW YORK" (PDF). United States Geological Survey.
  9. Fergusson, William B.; Prather, Bruce A. (1968). "Salt Deposits in the Salina Group in Pennsylvania". Pennsylvania, Bureau of Topographic and Geologic Survey.
  10. Janssens, Adriaan (1977). "SILURIAN ROCKS IN THE SUBSURFACE OF NORTHWESTERN OHIO" (PDF). OHIO DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES.
  11. Rickard, Lawernce (1969). "Stratigraphy of the Upper Silurian Salina Group New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Ontario" (PDF). New York State Museum. Retrieved 4 April 2023.
  12. DROSTE, JOHN B.; SHAVER, ROBERT H. (1982). "THE SALINA GROUP (MIDDLE AND UPPER SILURIAN) OF INDIANA Special Report 24". IUScholarWorks Indiana University.
  13. Sheban, Jeffrey (30 November 2011). "Saltology 101". The Columbus Dispatch. Retrieved 4 March 2023.
  14. ^ "ROCK SALT". Case Western Reserve University. 10 September 2021. Retrieved 4 April 2023.
  15. ^ Schaetzl, Richard. "Gypsum Mining". Michigan State University.
Chronostratigraphy of Michigan
Ph
Cz
Q
Pleistocene
indet.Glacial till
Mz
J
indet.
Pz
C
indet.
M
D
Upper
indet.
Frasnian
Middle
Givetian
Lower
  • Garden Island Formation
  • S
    indet.
    Llandovery
    O
    Upper
    Sandbian
    Middle
    Darriwilian
  • Bill's Creek Shale
  • Lower
  • Au Train Formation
  • Є
    Chronostratigraphy of New York
    Ph
    Pz
    D
    Upper
    Famennian
    Frasnian
    Middle
    Givetian
    Eifelian
    Lower
    Emsian
    S
    Pridoli
    Ludlow
    Ludfordian
    Gorstian
    Wenlock
    Homerian
    O
    Upper
    Katian
    Sandbian
    Black River Group
    Lowville Formation
    Chronostratigraphy of Ohio
    Ph
    Pz
    P
    Cisuralian
    Dunkard Group
    Greene Formation
    Washington Formation
    C
    Gzhelian
    Dunkard Group
    Waynesburg Formation
    Monongahela Group
    Uniontown Formation
    Pittsburgh Formation
    Kasimovian
    Conemaugh Group
    Casselman Formation
    Glenshaw Formation
    Moscovian
    Allegheny Group
    Pottsville Group
    M
    Viséan
    Tournaisian
    D
    Upper
    Famennian
    Ohio Shale
    Frasnian
    West Falls Group
    Angola Shale
    Rhinestreet Shale
    Middle
    Givetian
    Eifelian
    Lower
    Emsian
  • Amherstburg Dolomite
  • Detroit River Group
  • Hillsboro Sandstone
  • Lochkovian
    S
    Pridoli
  • Bertie Formation
  • Ludlow
    Ludfordian
    Gorstian
    Wenlock
    Homerian
    Lockport Group
    Gasport Dolomite
    Guelph Dolomite
    Goat Island Dolomite
    Llandovery
  • Brassfield Formation
  • Cabot Head Shale
  • Clinton Formation
  • Drowning Creek Formation
  • Manitoulin Dolomite
  • O
    Upper
    Middle
    Є
    Furongian
    Z
  • Swift Run Formation
  • Chronostratigraphy of Pennsylvania
    Ph
    Pz
    P
    Cisuralian
    Dunkard Group

    Greene Formation:

    Washington Formation:
    C
    Gzhelian
    Dunkard Group

    Waynesburg Formation:
    Monongahela Group

    Uniontown Formation:

    Pittsburgh Formation:
    Kasimovian
    Conemaugh Group

    Casselman Formation:
    Glenshaw Formation
    Mahoning Formation
    Moscovian
    Allegheny Group

    Freeport Formation:
    Kittanning Formation
    Clarian Formation
    Pottsville Group

    Beaver River Formation:
    Mercer Formation
    Bashkirian
    Pottsville Group

    Connoquenessing Formation:
    Sharon Formation
    M
    Serpukhovian
    Mauch Chunk Group
    Viséan
    Tournaisian
    Pocono Group
    D
    Upper
    Famennian
    Venango Group
    • Gantz, Hundred-foot sand, Fifty-foot sand, Thirty-foot sand, Nineveh-Snee, Gordon Stray, Fourth Sand, Fifth Sand, Bayard Sand, Elizabeth Sand, Sweet Richard,
      Chadakoin Formation, First Warren
    Bradford Group
    • Upper Warren, Lower Warren, Speechely Stray, Speechely, Balltown A, Balltown B, Balltown C, Sheffield, First Bradford, Second Bradford, Third Bradford, Kane
    Elk Group
    • 1st Elk Sand, 2nd Elk Sand, 3rd Elk Sand, 4th Elk Sand, 5th Elk Sand
    Ohio Shale
    Catskill Group
    Frasnian
    Catskill Group
    West Falls Group
    Sonyea Group
    Genesee Group / Harrell Shale
    Middle
    GivetianTully Limestone
    Hamilton Group
    Eifelian
    Hamilton Group
    Onondaga Limestone
    • Seneca
      Moorehouse
      Nedrow
      Edgecliff
    Lower
    Emsian
    Huntersville Chert, Needmore Shale, Bois Blanc Formation
    Oriskany Formation
    Helderberg Group (geology)
    Pragian
    Helderberg Group (geology)
    Lochkovian
    Helderberg Group (geology)
    S
    Pridoli
    Salina Group
    Ludlow
    Ludfordian
    Salina Group
    Gorstian
    Salina Group
    Wenlock
    Homerian
    Salina Group
    Lockport Group
    Llandovery
    Clinton Group
    Medina Group
    O
    Upper
    Trenton Group
    Black River Group

    Loyalsburg Formation

    Middle
    Lower
    Knox Supergroup
    Beekmantown Group
    Є
    Furongian
    Series 2
    Stage 4
  • Grenville Complex
  • Chronostratigraphy of West Virginia
    Ph
    Cz
    Pe
    EoceneIgneous intrusives
    Mz
    JIgneous intrusives
    Pz
    P
    Cisuralian
    Asselian
    C
    Gzhelian
    Kasimovian
    Moscovian
    Bashkirian
    M
    Serpukhovian
    Viséan
    Tournaisian
    D
    Upper
    Famennian
    Frasnian
    Middle
    Givetian
    Eifelian
    Lower
    Emsian
    Pragian
    Lochkovian
    S
    Pridoli
    Ludlow
    Ludfordian
    Gorstian
    Wenlock
    Homerian
    Sheinwoodian
    Llandovery
    Telychian
    Aeronian
    O
    Upper
    Hirnantian
    Katian
    Sandbian
    Middle
    Darriwilian
  • Trenton Limestone
  • Black River Group
  • Dapingian
    Lower
    Tremadocian
  • Wells Creek Formation
  • Knox Group
    Є
    Furongian
    Stage 10
    Knox Group
    Chilhowee Group
    Antietam Formation
    Harpers Formation
    Weverton Formation
    Loudoun Formation
    Z
    Ediacaran
  • Catoctin Formation

  • Silurian Period
    LlandoveryWenlockLudlowPridoli
    Categories:
    Salina Group Add topic