The Online Handbook of Illinois Stratigraphy (ILStrat)
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Willman, H. B., Elwood Atherton, T. C. Buschbach, Charles Collinson, John C. Frye, M. E. Hopkins, Jerry A. Lineback, and Jack A. Simon, 1975, Handbook of Illinois Stratigraphy: Illinois State Geological Survey Bulletin 95, 261 p.
H. B. Willman and John C. Frye
Tertiary System (Arduino, 1760).
The Tertiary System is a name retained from one of the earliest classifications of rocks.
Tertiary sediments in southern Illinois are included with Cretaceous sediments in the Embayment Megagroup. The Paleocene and Eocene Series (fig. T-2) are present as Coastal Plain sediments in extreme southern Illinois, where they are separated from overlapping Pliocene deposits by a major unconformity. Late Eocene, Oligocene, and Miocene sediments are absent, although some sediments of these series could have been deposited and later eroded during development of the sub-Pliocene unconformity. <center> {| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;" |- |<gallery caption="" widths=250px heights=250px perrow=4> Figure_T-2.jpg|{{file:Figure_T-2.jpg}} </gallery> |} </center>
The Tertiary System is extensive only in the extreme southern part of Illinois (figs. K-3, T-1), but it also occurs in small widely scattered areas in western and northern Illinois (fig. T-1). <br> <center> {| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;" |- |<gallery caption="" widths=250px heights=250px perrow=4> Figure_K-3.jpg|{{file:Figure_K-3.jpg}} Figure_T-1.jpg|{{file:Figure_T-1.jpg}} </gallery> |} </center> The Jackson Formation of the late Eocene occurs in Kentucky only a short distance south of Illinois, and Oligocene and Miocene deposits occur in the Coastal Plain Embayment area farther south. <br> Progressive sinking of the embayment area resulted in the relatively rapid southward thickening of the pre-Pliocene Cretaceous and Tertiary deposits and gave them a southward dip significantly greater than that of the Pliocene sediments. Tertiary sediments have a maximum thickness of about 400 feet in the vicinity of Cairo, Alexander County.
The Paleocene sediments are largely marine clays and sands, whereas the Eocene sands and silty clays indicate a return to nonmarine deltaic sedimentation like that operating during the Cretaceous. The Pliocene sediments are mostly fluvial deposits of a continental environment.
place a <pre><br></pre>at the end of a line to get a line return ARDUINO, GIOVANNI, 1760, Nuova raccolta di opuscoli scientifici e filologici del padre abate Angiolo Galogierà: Venice, Italy, tom. 6, p. 142-143.
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