Brallier Formation

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Brallier Formation
Stratigraphic range: Devonian

Outcrop of Brallier Formation on north side of Pennsylvania Turnpike, central Bedford County, near Mile Marker 138
Type sedimentary
Sub-units Black Creek Siltstone Member,[1] Minnehaha Springs Member[2]
Overlies Harrell Formation
Thickness 1350 to 1800 feet in central PA[3]
Lithology
Primary shale, sandstone
Location
Region Appalachian Mountains
Country United States
Type section
Named by Charles Butts, 1918[3]

The Devonian Brallier Formation is a mapped bedrock unit in Pennsylvania, Maryland, West Virginia, and Virginia.

Description

The Brallier Formation was described by Charles Butts in 1918 as a fine-grained, siliceous shale with few fine-grained sandstone layers, from outcrops in central Pennsylvania. Others expanded usage of the term to rocks in other states.

Stratigraphy

The Brallier is roughly equivalent to the Scherr Formation.

The contact with the underlying Harrell Formation is generally gradational.

Fossils

Hasson and Dennison reported the following fossils from outcrops of the lower Brallier at Keyser, West Virginia, Ridgeville, West Virginia, and McCoole, Maryland:[4]

  • Bivalvia: Buchiola retrostriata, Paracardium doris, Pterochaenia fragilis
  • Cephalopoda: Bactrites, Orthoceras filosum
  • Cricoconarida: Styliolina fissurella
  • Annelida: Pteridichnites biseriatus

Notable Exposures

Type locality is at a railway station 6 miles northeast of Everett, Bedford County, Pennsylvania.[3]

Age

Relative age dating places the Brallier in the late Devonian.

References

  1. Avary, K.L., and Dennison, J.M., 1980, Back Creek Siltstone Member of Devonian Brallier Formation in Virginia and West Virginia: Southeastern Geology, v. 21, no. 2, p. 121-153.
  2. Lyke, W.L., 1986, The stratigraphy, paleogeography, depositional environment, faunal communities, and general petrology of the Minnehaha Springs Member of the Scherr Formation: Southeastern Geology, v. 26, no. 3, p. 173-192.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Butts, Charles, 1918, Geologic section of Blair and Huntingdon Counties, central Pennsylvania: American Journal of Science, 4th series, v. 46, p. 523-537.
  4. Hasson, Kenneth O., and Dennison, John M., 1978, STRATIGRAPHY OF THE DEVONIAN HARRELL AND MILLBORO SHALES IN PARTS OF PENNSYLVANIA, MARYLAND, WEST VIRGINIA, AND VIRGINIA, Project Final Report for Energy Research and Development Administration Contract #EY-77-C-21-8153, May 1978


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