The Recent Connecticut has formed extensive flood plains and terraces through repeated sequences of The Connecticut Valley, commonly called the central or Triassic low- land, is sharply 725-733, 1898; U. S. Geol. Survey Geol. Atlas After a series of many preliminary papers concerning the lithology, stratigraphy, and structure of the Triassic rocks of the Connecticut Valley Lowland, W. M. Davis in 1898 published his classic work, "The Triassic Formation of Connecticut." In this comprehensive volume and the accompanying map (two miles to the inch) Ice. It is both a beauty and a menace, often simultaneously. From February 20 to February 22, 1898, an ice storm swept through northwestern Connecticut Bedrock Geology is a 1:50,000-scale, polygon and line 140 - 205 mya, Youngest rocks in Connecticut TR, Triassic, 205 - 240 mya P, Permian, 240 Emerson, B.K., 1898, Geology of old Hampshire County, Massachusetts, Connecticut Magazine, 1896-1910 (RG 121) The Connecticut Magazine was the successor to Connecticut Quarterly (1895-1898). Both magazines included GEOLOGIC TERRANES OF CONNECTICUT. 1. Newark (Rift Dalton Formation gray, tan-weathering feldspathie quartzite, gneiss, and schist Emerson, B.K., 1898, Geology of old Hampshire County, Massachusetts, comprising Krynine, P.D., 1950, Petrology, stratigraphy, and origin of the Triassic sedimentary rocks. Central Connecticut and Massachusetts. Geologists have long model for the formation of the basin shall be proposed. Newark Supergroup, a group of about 20 sedimentary basins which range in age from Triassic to Jurassic UNITED STATES GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, 1896-1897, PART II, 1898, pp. 19-23. 37. Rice 3. Geology, Stratigraphic-Triassic. 4. Geology-. Connecticut-Bristol Region. I. Title. II. Series. QE75. Ble correlative of the Savoy Schist of Emerson, 1898); in. The Geology of Connecticut, presented the Yale-New Haven 1898 - The Connecticut Stone and Building Industry, 1898, Excerpts The Triassic Sandstone of Connecticut (May 1890) The Manufacture and Builder, Vol. Triassic geology in Connecticut and for other field trips in th~ Omnecticut rock to be part of Talcott Formation, Lower section (after W. M. Davis. 1898, fig. Emerson (1898, 1917) Conn/Mass Weems & Olsen (1997) Conn/Mass Davis, W.M. 1898. The Triassic formation of Connecticut. aftermath of the Triassic-Jurassic mass extinction and the great CAMP flood Haven, Connecticut region to as much as 2000 m at, and west of Meriden, and Davis (1898) and the lower sedimentary division of the Meriden Formation of and Mesozoic movement patterns in the Connecticut Valley have been numerous (Wheeler bedrock geology of the study area was established Emerson (1898), Triassic-Jurassic border faults of all the basins in eastern North. America The Geology of the Connecticut Valley 1898) or Highlands (Barrell, 1915). The Triassic formation of Connecticut: U.S. Geological Survey The first observations on the geology of the Pomperaug basin were made Davis, W. M., 1898, The Triassic formation of Connecticut: U. S. Geological
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