Page:EB1911 - Volume 08.djvu/141

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126
DEVONIAN SYSTEM
  


that the geographical conditions of the Russian area during the Devonian period must have closely resembled those of the Rhine basin and central England during the Triassic period. The Russian Devonian rocks have been classified in Table II. There is an unquestionable passage of the uppermost Devonian rocks of Russia into the base of the Carboniferous system.

Table II.
  North-West Russia. Central Russia. Petchoraland. Ural Region.
Upper. Red sandstone
 (Old Red).
Limestones with
Spirifer Verneuili and
Sp. Archiaci.
Limestones with Arca
oreliana
Limestones with Sp.
Verneuili and Sp.
Archiaci.
Domanik slates and
 limestones with Sp.
Verneuili.
Cypridina slates,
Clymenia limestones
 (Famennien).
Limestones with
Gephyoceras intumescens
 and Rhynchonella cuboides
 (Frasnien).
Middle. Dolomites and limestones
with
Spirifer Anossofi.
Marl with
Spirifer Anossofi
and corals.
Limestones and slates
 with Sp. Anossofi
 (Givétien).
Limestones and slates with
 Pentamerus baschkiricus
 (Eifélien).
Lower sandstone (Old Red).
Lower. Absent.     Limestones and slates of the
Yuresan and Ufa rivers,
slate and quartzite,
marble of Byclaya and
of Bogoslovsk, phyllitic
schists and quartzite.

The Lower Devonian of the Harz contains a fauna which is very different from that of the Rhenish region; to this facies the name "Hercynian" has been applied, and the correlation of the strata has been a source of prolonged discussion among continental geologists. A similar fauna appears in Lower Devonian of Bohemia, in Brittany (limestone of Erbray) and in the Urals. The Upper Devonian of the Harz passes up into the Culm.

In the eastern Thuringian Fichtelgebirge the upper division is represented by Clymenia limestone and Cypridina slates with Adorf limestone, diabase and Planschwitzer tuff in the lower part. The middle division has diabases and tuffs at the top with Tentaculite and Nereite shales and limestones below. The upper part of the Lower Devonian, the sandy shale of Steinach, rests unconformably upon Silurian rocks. In the Carnic Alps are coral reef limestones, the equivalents of the Iberg limestone, which attain an enormous thickness; these are underlain by coral limestones with fossils similar to those of the Konjeprus limestone of Bohemia; below these are shales and nodular limestones with goniatites. The Devonian rocks of Poland are sandy in the lower, and more calcareous in the upper parts. They are of interest because while the upper portions agree closely with the Rhenish facies, from the top of the Coblentzien upwards, in the sandy beds near the base Old Red Sandstone fishes (Coccosteus, &c.) are found. In France Devonian rocks are found well developed in Brittany, as indicated in the table, also in Normandy and Maine; in the Boulonnais district only the middle and upper divisions are known. In south France in the neighbourhood of Cabrières, about Montpellier and in the Montagne Noire, all three divisions are found in a highly calcareous condition. Devonian rocks are recognized, though frequently much metamorphosed, on both the northern and southern flanks of the Pyrenees; while on the Spanish peninsula they are extensively developed. In Asturias they are no less than 3280 ft. thick, all three divisions and most of the central European subdivisions are present. In general, the Lower Devonian fossils of Spain bear a marked resemblance to those of Brittany.

Asia.—From the Ural Mountains eastward, Devonian rocks have been traced from point to point right across Asia. In the Altai Mountains they are represented by limestones of Coblentzien age with a fauna possessing Hercynian features. The same features are observed in the Devonian of the Kougnetsk basin, and in Turkestan. Well-developed quartzites with slates and diabases are found south of Yarkand and Khotan. Middle and Upper Devonian strata are widespread in China. Upper Devonian rocks are recorded from Persia, and from the Hindu Kush on the right bank of the Chitral river.

England.—In England the original Devonian rocks are developed in Devon and Cornwall and west Somerset. In north Devonshire these rocks consist of sandstones, grits and slates, while in south Devon there are, in addition, thick beds of massive limestone, and intercalations of lavas and tuffs. The interpretation of the stratigraphy in this region is a difficult matter, partly on account of the absence of good exposures with fossils, and partly through the disturbed condition of the rocks. The system has been subdivided as shown in Table III.

Table III.
  North Devon and West
Somerset.
South Devon.
Upper. Pilton group. Grits, slates
 and thin limestones.
Baggy group. Sandstones
 and slates.
Pickwell Down group.
 Dark slates and grits.
Morte slates (?).
Ashburton slates.
Livaton slates.
Red and green Entomis slates
 (Famennien).
Red and grey slates with
 tuffs.
Chudleigh goniatite limestone
 Petherwyn beds (Frasnien).
Middle. Ilfracombe slates with
 lenticles of limestone.
Combe Martin grits and
 slates.
Torquay and Plymouth
 limestones and Ashprington
 volcanic series. (Givétien
 and Eifélien.)
Slates and limestones of
 Hope's Nose.
Lower. Hangman grits and slates.
Lynton group, grits and
 calcareous slates.
Foreland grits and slates.
Looe beds (Cornwall).
Meadfoot, Cockington and
 Warberry series of slates
 and greywackes. (Coblentzien
 and Gédinnien.)

The fossil evidence clearly shows the close agreement of the Rhenish and south Devonshire areas. In north Devonshire the Devonian rocks pass upward without break into the Culm.

North America.—In North America the Devonian rocks are extensively developed; they have been studied most closely in the New York region, where they are classified according to Table IV.

The classification below is not capable of application over the states generally and further details are required from many of the regions where Devonian rocks have been recognized, but everywhere the broad threefold division seems to obtain. In Maryland the following arrangement has been adopted—(1) Helderberg = Coeymans; (2) Oriskany; (3) Romney = Erian; (4) Jennings = Genesee and Portage; (5) Hampshire = Catskill in part. In the interior the Helderbergian is missing and the system commences with (1) Oriskany, (2) Onondaga, (3) Hamilton, (4) Portage (and Genesee), (5) Chemung.

The Helderbergian series is mainly confined to the eastern part of the continent; there is a northern development in Maine, and in Canada (Gaspé, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Montreal); an Appalachian belt, and a lower Mississippian region. The series as a whole is mainly calcareous (2000 ft. in Gaspé), and thins out towards the west. The fauna has Hercynian affinities. The Oriskany formation consists largely of coarse sandstones; it is thin in New York, but in Maryland and Virginia it is several hundred feet thick. It is more widespread than the underlying Helderbergian. The Lower Devonian appears to be thick in northern Maine and in Gaspé, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, but neither the palaeontology nor the stratigraphy has been completely worked out.