https://ilstratwiki.web.illinois.edu/index.php?title=Grayslake_Peat&feed=atom&action=historyGrayslake Peat - Revision history2024-03-28T18:24:08ZRevision history for this page on the wikiMediaWiki 1.38.4https://ilstratwiki.web.illinois.edu/index.php?title=Grayslake_Peat&diff=15524&oldid=prevJennifer.Obrad: /* Original description */2017-01-12T20:31:27Z<p><span dir="auto"><span class="autocomment">Original description</span></span></p>
<p><b>New page</b></p><div>{{Editwithform}}<br />
{{Tree<br />
|category1=Cenozoic Erathem<br />
|category2=Quaternary System<br />
|category3=Holocene Series<br />
|tree1=Grayslake Peat<br />
|tree21=Cenozoic Erathem<br />
|tree22=Quaternary System<br />
|tree23=Holocene Series<br />
}}<br />
==Primary source==<br />
Willman, H. B., and John C. Frye, 1970, Pleistocene Stratigraphy of Illinois: Illinois State Geological Survey Bulletin 94, 204 p.<br />
<br />
==Contributing author&#40;s&#41;==<br />
H. B. Willman and John C. Frye<br />
<br />
==Name==<br />
<br />
===Original description===<br />
Grayslake Peat (Willman and Frye 1970).<br />
<br />
===Derivation===<br />
The Grayslake Peat is named for exposures of peat in the pit of the Grayslake Peat Company 1 mile southeast of Grayslake, Lake County, NE SE NE Sec. 2, T. 44 N., R. 10 E.<br />
<br />
===Other names===<br />
<br />
===History&#47;background===<br />
<br />
==Type section==<br />
<br />
===Type location===<br />
The type section (Hester and Lamar, 1969, p. 12) exposes 14 feet of peat. It is here classified as a formation.<br />
<br />
===Type author&#40;s&#41;===<br />
<br />
===Type status===<br />
<br />
==Reference section==<br />
<br />
===Reference location===<br />
<br />
===Reference author&#40;s&#41;===<br />
<br />
===Reference status===<br />
<br />
==Stratigraphic relationships==<br />
<br />
==Extent and thickness==<br />
The Grayslake Peat occurs most abundantly in lake basins in the northern part of the Valparaiso Drift in McHenry and Lake Counties, but it is present in nearly all counties in the area of Woodfordian glaciation. It also is present in some filled or partially filled floodplain lakes, particularly along the Illinois Valley below Starved Rock, and in abandoned channels resulting from glacial diversion, such as the Goose Lake Channel in Whiteside County. In these areas it locally overlies the Cahokia Alluvium.<br><br />
<br />
The deposits vary greatly in thickness and some 30 feet thick have been reported. The most detailed maps of the peat deposits are in county reports of the University of Illinois Agricultural Experiment Station. Some of the peat deposits shown on early maps have been drained and, as a result of oxidation, are greatly thinned and changed into organic silts. Some would not now be classified as peat.<br />
<br />
==Lithology==<br />
It consists for the most part of organic deposits that are covered only by soil or slopewash from surrounding hills. The formation is largely peat and muck, but locally it is partly or largely marl. Many deposits contain interbedded silt and clay.<br />
<br />
==Core&#40;s&#41;==<br />
<br />
==Photograph&#40;s&#41;==<br />
<br />
==Contacts==<br />
<br />
==Well log characteristics==<br />
<br />
==Fossils==<br />
<br />
==Age and correlation==<br />
The Grayslake Peat is Wisconsinan and Holocene in age.<br />
<br />
==Environments of deposition==<br />
The Grayslake Peat develops in a swampy depression or in the late stage of lake filling. It overlies lacustrine sediments, outwash, or till. It underlies the flat surfaces of the lake basins and, in places, borders present lakes. Many of the areas are swampy and the deposits still accumulating.<br />
<br />
==Economic importance==<br />
<br />
==Remarks==<br />
<br />
==References==<br />
HESTER, N. C, and J. E. LAMAR, 1969, Peat and humus in Illinois: Illinois State Geological Survey Industrial Minerals Notes 37, 14 p.<br><br />
<br />
{{Codes<br />
|membercode=0060<br />
|geo_unit=gp<br />
}}</div>Jennifer.Obrad