Abstract

Wolosz. T. H. 1992 07 15: Turbulence-controlled succession in Middle Devonian reefs of eastern New York State. The Edgecliff Member ol the Middle Devonian Onondaga Formation contains numerous reefs comprised of two distinct facies. The Phaceloid Colonial Rugosan Facies consists of thickets and mounds, while the Favositid/Crinoidal Sand facies occurs as flank beds surrounding rugosan mounds and as low shield-shaped banks interbedded with thickets of the colonial rugosan facics. Three of these reefs - the North Coxsackie. Albrights and Roberts Hill reefs - have been studied in order to determine the factors that controlled their development and their preserved paleocommunity succession. Both the Roberts Hill and Albrights reefs display well-developed rugosan mounds with an internal succession of rugosan genera. The North Coxsackie reef is a crinoidal sand bank with rugosan thickets and a back-reef satellite mound. Based on the lithology of the underlying limestone in which the reefs are rooted, the North Coxsackie reef is considered to have grown in a shallow-water environment, landwards of the two other reefs. Successional sequences or partial sequences are common to the three reefs, and are found to be reversible - a response attributed to changes in sea-level. As a result, the successions preserved in these reefs are interpreted as having been controlled by degree ol water turbulence.

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