The data is in the strata
Within offshore units such as the Kope Formation, meter-scale cycles are bundled into an intermediate, or fourth-order, scale of cyclicity characterized by systematic changes in meter-scale cycle thickness. These fourth-order cycles are typically around 20 m thick and can be recognized by a series of shale-rich, thicker than average meter-scale cycles that pass upwards into limestone-rich, thinner than average meter-scale cycles. These 20-m or 4th order cycles are interpreted to reflect changes in water depth; however, whether these changes were driven by eustasy, subsidence rates, or changes in sediment supply is unknown.
These 20 m cycles are often reflected in lithostratigraphic nomenclature. For example, the Grand Avenue Member (left, top) is the limestone-rich unit at the top of one of these 20 m cycles. Similarly, lithostratigraphers working near Cincinnati have recognized a tongue of the Kope extending into the lower Fairview (Wesselman Tongue) and and a tongue of the Fairview that projects into the upper Kope (the North Bend Tongue). The North Bend Tongue of the Fairview is the limestone-rich unit at the top of one 20 m cycle and the Wesselman tongue of the Kope is the shale-rich unit at the base of the next 20 m cycle.
A systematic search for 20 m cycles has only taken place in the Kope and lower Fairview Formations. Their existence in the remainder of the type Cincinnatian Series is unknown.
Comments or questions? Please contact Steven Holland at stratum@uga.edu
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