Nanjemoy Formation

Coordinates: 38°48′N 76°42′W / 38.8°N 76.7°W / 38.8; -76.7
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Nanjemoy Formation
Ma
Type
Approximate paleocoordinates
39°06′N 60°48′W / 39.1°N 60.8°W / 39.1; -60.8
Region Virginia
 Maryland
 District of Columbia
Country United States
ExtentExtent
Type section
Named forNanjemoy Creek
Etymology
Named byClark & Martin
Year defined1901
Nanjemoy Formation is located in the United States
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation (the United States)

The Nanjemoy Formation is a

period. Specifically to the Ypresian stage of the Eocene epoch, about 55 to 50 Ma or Wasatchian in the NALMA classification, defined by the contemporaneous Wasatch Formation
of the Pacific US coast.

The about 20 metres (66 ft) thin formation crops out in a narrow irregular band and only in certain of the many creeks of the Maryland peninsula and on the southern side of the Potomac River in Virginia. The two members the formation was divided into by Clark and Martin in 1901; Potapaco and Woodstock, represent different phases in the basin history. The lower Potapaco Member is much more clayey, described as marl, than the upper Woodstock Member, probably characteristic of less storm influences in the shallow shelf sediments.

The formation has provided a wealth of fossils of mainly fish, but also mammals, reptiles, birds and flora. The presence of the sharks

Carcharocles aksuaticus, as well as various other shark and ray species are notable. Crocodylian, snake, turtle, mammal, and bird remains have all been found in the Nanjemoy Formation.[1]

Etymology

Algonquian languages; the Nanjemoy Formation crops out in the territories of the Nanticoke and Powhatan

The formation is named after Nanjemoy Creek, a left tributary of the Potomac River.[2] Nanjemoy is probably an Ojibwe word, meaning "one goes downward,"[2] representing the many rivers and creeks in the wet watershed of Chesapeake Bay, an area originally inhabited by the Algonquin-speaking Nanticoke and Powhatan.[3]

Wicomico is the name of two separate rivers, one on Maryland's Eastern Shore, Wicomico River (Maryland eastern shore), and another in Southern Maryland, Wicomico River (Potomac River tributary), and is the name of a small thoroughfare in southeastern Charles County.[2]

Wigh or wik, representing "pleasant" and accomico "dwelling, village" was the native's way of telling the Europeans they liked living there.[2]

Potapaco was an early name for Port Tobacco Creek[4] that was named after the Piscataway people.

Mattawoman, found in Charles County, Prince George's County, and on the Eastern Shore, has remnants of not only Algonquin, but Fox and Ojibwe as well, and translates to "where one goes pleasantly."[2]

Definition

Geologic map of Maryland (1901)

The Nanjemoy Formation was defined by Clark and Martin in 1901, as part of the mapping by the

Maryland Geological Survey. The Nanjemoy Formation was divided into two members, the lower or Potapaco, and the upper or Woodstock. The main lithologic distinction is that the lower part of the Nanjemoy is much more clayey than the upper part. In the subsurface, the distinction between the members is less evident than in outcrops, especially in Maryland, so the formation has been left undivided.[5]

In the outcrops along the Potomac River near Popes Creek, the contact between the Woodstock and Potapaco at about 10 feet (3.0 m) above the water level.[5]

Extent

Nanjemoy Formation is located in Virginia
FS
FS
Ws
Ws
Nanjemoy Formation (Virginia)
Nanjemoy Formation is located in Maryland
NC
NC
Nanjemoy Formation (Maryland)
Notable sites of the Nanjemoy Formation in the Potomac River basin in northeastern Virginia and western Maryland
NC - Nanjemoy Creek, Ws - Woodstock, FS - Fisher/Sullivan site

The Nanjemoy Formation, represented as Tn on the geologic map of the Washington West 30' × 60' Quadrangle, Maryland, Virginia, and Washington D.C., restricted to the southeastern side of the Potomac Basin represented in the quadrangle.[6] Scott (2005) in his thesis included a map showing the thin bands of outcrops of both the underlying Marlboro Clay and the Nanjemoy Formation, restricted to the many creeks feeding the Chesapeake Bay.[7]

The Nanjemoy Formation (Eocene), the Marlboro Clay (Paleocene), and the Aquia Formation (Paleocene) are present in the westernmost part of the Potomac channel.[8]

The outcrop area of the formation is designated Nanjemoy Wildlife Management Area.

Geology

The Nanjemoy Formation is represented by the orange Paleo-Eocene surrounding the Potomac River
Learn more Geology of the Appalachians under that article.

Geologically, the area of deposition of the Nanjemoy Formation is part of the

Atlantic coastal plain province
.

Potomac Basin

The

Atlantic coastal plain that stretches along the Atlantic coast of Canada and the United States. The basin stretches across parts of four states (Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia), as well as the District of Columbia. This area is also called the Potomac watershed. It includes all of the land area where water drains towards the mouth of the Potomac – the point where the river spills into the Chesapeake Bay. The Potomac River basin is the 2nd largest watershed in the Chesapeake Bay watershed.[9]

Land

The drainage area of the Potomac includes 14,670 square miles in four states: Virginia (5,723 sq. mi.), Maryland (3,818 sq. mi.), West Virginia (3,490 sq. mi.), Pennsylvania (1,570 sq. mi.), and the District of Columbia (69 sq. mi.). The basin’s total area varies depending on map projection used. The basin lies in five geological provinces: the Appalachian Plateau, the Ridge and Valley, Blue Ridge, Piedmont Plateau, and Coastal Plain. The Potomac meanders over 383 miles from Fairfax Stone, West Virginia to Point Lookout, Maryland. The river’s distance will vary with map projection and location of measuring tool in the river (ie. middle of the river, Maryland shoreline, Virginia shoreline).

Based on information from the NLCD 2011 database, the majority of the basin’s land area is covered by forests at 54.6 percent of the land area. Developed land makes up 14.1 percent of the basin’s land area, while agriculture covers 26.0 percent. Water and wetlands make up 5.9 percent of the basin’s land area.

The Potomac's major tributaries include: the Anacostia River, Antietam Creek, the Cacapon River, Catoctin Creek, Conococheague Creek, the Monocacy River, the North Branch, the South Branch, the Occoquan River, the Savage River, the Seneca Creek, and the Shenandoah River.

People

The population of the basin is approximately 6.11 million (2010 estimated census). The population has increased by about five percent since 2005. The following information is based on 2010 estimated census data.

Stratigraphy

The Potomac Basin is located entirely on the North American Plate

The Nanjemoy Formation belongs to two geologic groups; the

the Carolinas. Both geologic groups have been dated to the early Paleogene; the Paleocene and Eocene periods, or in the commonly used NALMA classification; Wasatchian, defined by the age-equivalent Wasatch Formation of Wyoming
.

The third-oldest unit in the Pamunkey Group is the Nanjemoy Formation that overlies the Marlboro Clay and is partly overlain by the Piney Point Formation and in many areas covered by the Miocene Calvert Formation, separated by an unconformity representing about 34 Ma.

The upper surface reaches an elevation of about 50 metres (160 ft) and is overlain in most places by the Calvert Formation (Tc). The unit is present only in the southeastern part of the map area of Washington D.C., and it reaches a maximum thickness of about 20 metres (66 ft).[6]

Petrology

The formation comprises

clay. In places, the sand is very muddy or contains many small quartz pebbles, and the clay is silty or sandy. Both lithologies contain richly fossiliferous beds including abundant mollusk shells.[6]

Robert E. Weems and Gary J. Grimsley (1999) described the geology of the Fisher/Sullivan site in Virginia as:[10]

Formation Member Bed Lithology Thickness (ft)
Nanmejoy Potomac B Sand, dominantly quartz, fine-grained, well sorted, micaceous, glauconitic, medium-brown, spa$e wood fragments present and molds and casts of shells 1
Sand, dominantly quartz, dominantly fine-grained but with abundant rounded grains of medium- to coarse-grained quartz and scattered rounded quartz granules and pebbles to 1 cm (0.39 in) in diameter, glauconitic, medium-brown, contains abundant shell casts of Venericardia potapacoensis and abundant teeth and bones 2
Unconformity
Nanmejoy Potomac A Sand, dominantly quartz, very fine- to fine-grained, bioturbated and massive, glauconitic, medium-brownish- gray, scattered wood fragments throughout and scattered molds and casts of shells, upper foot bioturbated and burrows filled with matrix from above bed, basal foot contains abundant medium- to coarse-grains and is more glauconitic than sediments above 15
Marlboro Clay Clay, silty, finely
micaceous
, greasy, sticky, lightgray, upper two feet intensely burrowed and burrows filled with matrix from bed above
8
Total section exposed 26

Paleogeography

Earth in the Ypresian (50 Ma)

Climate

Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum
(PETM)

The climate of the Early Eocene and Late Paleocene was very hot and rich in CO2. Based on the fossils of the terrifyingly large

extinction of the previous megafauna; the dinosaurs. The climate of the Neotropical biome was estimated at 34 °C (93 °F) average yearly temperatures and 2000 ppm atmospheric CO2.[11]

Depositional environment

The depositional environment of the Nanjemoy Formation is mostly shallow shelf. The more clayey beds suggest an area or time of quiet water, not affected by waves, tides, or current activity; intercalated sandier zones may reflect the higher energy of waves or currents during episodic storms. Its regional dip is eastward at 15–20 ft per mile (3-3.5 m/km).[5]

Paleontology

The floral and faunal assemblage of the Nanjemoy Formation is very varied and provides an insight into the paleobiological and paleoclimatological environment of the early Eocene. Fossils of bivalves, sharks, rays, actinopterygian fishes, reptiles, birds and mammals, and of fruits and seeds are common in the Potapaco Member. More than 2000 vertebrate coprolites from the Potapaco Member at the Fisher/Sullivan Site in Virginia were analyzed by Dentzien Dias et al. (2019). The chemical composition (phosphatic), inclusions and morphology suggest that only carnivorous scats were preserved.[12]

All Nanjemoy coprolites were produced by fishes;

actinopterygian fishes. The surface marks and the lack of flatness on most coprolites suggests early lithification of the Potapaco Member.[12]

Main fossil sites of the Nanjemoy Formation are

Fisher/Sullivan site, VA

In October 1990, Mr. Richard Brezina of the Maryland Geological Society (MGS) discovered an important fossil site east of Fredericksburg, in eastern Stafford County, Virginia. This locality, along an unnamed tributary of Muddy Creek, became known as the Fisher/Sullivan site in recognition of its principle landowners.[20]

Brezina immediately realized that the site was exceptional, because it yielded numerous shark teeth and other vertebrate remains from the sands and gravels in the unnamed tributary. Brezina notified other members of the Maryland Geological Society, and together members of the MGS began to screen stream sediments at the site for more shark teeth and other remains. It soon became apparent, from the types of teeth that were being found and from the color and texture of the sediments in the banks of the creek, that the fossils were being reworked from glauconitic ("greensand") horizons of the Lower Tertiary (Paleocene-Eocene) Pamunkey Group.[20]

Because the Pamunkey Group previously had yielded only sparse vertebrate remains, it seemed reasonable to suspect that this locality was scientifically important.[20]

Fossil content

Among many invertebrates (such as gastropods, bivalves, corals, and bryozoans), the following fossils have been reported from the Nanjemoy Formation:

Group Fossils Member Site Images Refs
Mammals Peradectes guottai, Pisodus oweni, cf. Esthonyx sp., aff. Homogalax sp., Miacidae indet., Nyctitheriidae indet., ?Ischyromyidae indet. Potapaco Fisher/Sullivan, Prince Charles County, VA [18]
cf. Hyopsodus sp.
cf. Palaeosinopa sp.
Birds ?Odontopteryx sp.
Ypresiglaux gulottai
Reptiles
Palaeophis grandis, Palaeophis sp. Woodstock
King George County, VA
[14]
Fish Myliobatis dixoni, Odontaspis macrota [15]
Lamna cuspidata, Galeocerdo latidens [16]
Hypotodus verticalis Nanjemoy Creek, MD [13]
Odontaspis macrota, Evergreen Plantation, VA [19]
Otodus obliquus
Potapaco Evergreen Plantation
Fisher/Sullivan, VA
[19][18]
Potapaco Fisher/Sullivan, VA [18]
Flora
Vitis sp., ?Beckettia sp.
[17][18]

Contemporaneous fossiliferous units

Wasatchian correlations in North America
Formation Wasatch DeBeque
Claron
Indian Meadows Pass Peak Tatman Willwood Golden Valley Coldwater Allenby Kamloops Ootsa Lake Margaret Nanjemoy Hatchetigbee Tetas de Cabra Hannold Hill Coalmont Cuchara Galisteo San Jose
Mangaorapan
(NZ)
Basin
Green River
Bighorn
Piceance




Colorado Plateau





Wind River





Green River







Bighorn
Williston
Okanagan
Princeton Buck Creek Nechako Sverdrup Potomac GoM Laguna Salada Rio Grande
North Park
Raton Galisteo San Juan
Nanjemoy Formation is located in North America
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation
Nanjemoy Formation (North America)
Country  United States  Canada  United States  Mexico  United States
Copelemur
Coryphodon
Diacodexis
Homogalax
Oxyaena
Paramys
Primates
Birds
Reptiles
Fish
Insects
Flora
Environments Alluvial-fluvio-lacustrine Fluvial Fluvial Fluvio-lacustrine Fluvial Lacustrine Fluvio-lacustrine Deltaic-paludal Shallow marine Fluvial Shallow marine Fluvial Fluvial
Wasatchian volcanoclastics

Wasatchian fauna

Wasatchian flora
Volcanic Yes No Yes No Yes No Yes No Yes No


Ypresian, Wasatchian and Casamayoran formations:[21]

North America
South America
Antarctica
Europe
Asia
Africa
Oceania

See also

References

  1. ^ Weems & Grimsley, 1999
  2. ^ a b c d e Joseph Norris, TheBayNet, 2016
  3. ^ Library of Congress - National atlas. Indian tribes, cultures & languages: United States
  4. ^ UoC, 1938, p.1713
  5. ^ a b c McCartan et al., 1995, p.17
  6. ^ a b c Geologic Map MD; VA; D.C., USGS, 2017
  7. ^ Scott, 2005, p.67
  8. ^ McCartan et al., 1995, p.7
  9. ^ Nardolilli et al., 2020
  10. ^ Weems & Grimsley, 1999, p.5
  11. ^ Head et al., 2009
  12. ^ a b Dentzien Dias et al., 2019
  13. ^ a b Nanjemoy Creek at Fossilworks.org
  14. ^ a b Woodstock at Fossilworks.org
  15. ^ a b Woodstock 2 at Fossilworks.org
  16. ^ a b Woodstock 3 at Fossilworks.org
  17. ^ a b Fisher/Sullivan 1 at Fossilworks.org
  18. ^ a b c d e Fisher/Sullivan 2 at Fossilworks.org
  19. ^ a b c Evergreen Plantation 1 at Fossilworks.org
  20. ^ a b c Weems & Grimsley, 1999, p.3
  21. ^ Fossilworks.org

Bibliography

Nanjemoy
  • Norris, Joseph (23 October 2016). "Do you know the Indian name places in Maryland?". TheBayNet.com. Retrieved 2020-03-06.
  • Wilmarth, M. Grace (1938). "Lexicon of geologic names of the United States - Part 2 M-Z". USGS Bulletin. 896: 1–2396. Retrieved 2020-03-08.
Potomac Basin

Geology publications

  • Lyttle, Peter T.; Aleinikoff, John N.; Burton, William C.; Crider Jr., E. Allen; Drake Jr., Avery A.; Froelich, Albert J.; Wright Horton Jr., J.; Kasselas, Gregorios; Mixon, Lucy McCartan, Arthur E. Nelson, Wayne L. Newell, Louis Pavlides, David S. Powars, C. Scott Southworth, and Robert E. Weems, Robert B. (2017). "Geologic Map of the Washington West 30' × 60' Quadrangle, Maryland, Virginia, and Washington D.C." (PDF). USGS: 1. Retrieved 2020-03-07. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Scott, Mitchell Louis (2005). Mapping and Characterization of the Marlboro Clay formation (M.Sc. thesis).
    University of Maryland
    . pp. 1–115.

Paleontology publications

Further reading

  • Tejedor, Marcelo F.; Goin, Francisco J.; Gelfo, Javier N.; López, Guillermo; Bond, Mariano; Carlini, Alfredo A.; Scillato Yané, Gustavo J.; Woodburne, Michael O.; Chornogubsky, Eugenio Aragón, Marcelo A. Reguero, Nicholas J. Czaplewski, Sergio Vincon, Gabriel M. Martin, Martín Ciancio, Laura (2009). "New Early Eocene Mammalian Fauna from Western Patagonia, Argentina" (PDF).
    S2CID 85941397. Retrieved 2019-03-02.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link
    )
Ancient publications
  • R. E. Weems. 1985. Vertebrate biozones of the Pamunkey Group (Paleocene and Eocene, Maryland and Virginia). Stratigraphy and paleontology of the outcropping Tertiary beds in the Pamunkey River region, central Virginia Coastal Plain—Guidebook for Atlantic Coastal Plain Geological Association 1984 field Trip: Atlantic Coastal Plain Geological Association 198-209
  • R. Weems and S. Horman. 1983. Teleost fish remains (Osteoglossidae, Blochiidae, Scombridae, Triodontidae, Diodontidae) from the Lower Eocene Nanjemoy Formation of Maryland. Proceedings of The Biological Society of Washington 96(1):38-49
  • K. V. Palmer and D. C. Brann. 1965. Catalogue of the Paleocene and Eocene molluscs of the southern and eastern United States. Part 1. Pelecypoda, Amphineura, Peteropoda, Scaphopoda and Cephalopoda. Bulletins of American Paleontology 48:1-471
  • S.F. Blake. 1941. Note on a vertebra of Palaeophis from the Eocene of Maryland. Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences 31(12):501-503
  • W. B. Clark and G. C. Martin. 1901. Mollusca. Maryland Geological Survey, Eocene 122-203
  • C. R. Eastman. 1901. Pisces. Maryland Geological Survey Eocene 98-115
  • W. B. Clark. 1895. Contributions to the Eocene fauna of the Middle Atlantic slope. Johns Hopkins University Circulars 15(121):3-6