Mystery structure: please help identify / interpret

I have a mystery for you today:

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These are samples of Tonoloway Formation carbonate (not sure if it’s limestone or dolostone in retrospect), with bedding more or less horizontal in these images, and a few petite stylolites running orthogonal to that. The top sample has a gentle fold 2/5ths of the way across. All of the samples are from the same site in West Virginia, along Corridor H.

I’m wondering about the closely-spaced vertical (bedding-perpendicular) lines. Have any of my readers observed these before? What are they? How do they form?

Thanks in advance for any insight you can share.

0 thoughts on “Mystery structure: please help identify / interpret”

  1. Well, what pops into my head are refilled tension gashes. But they don’t necessarily have a relationship to structure. Then again they might have been soft-sediment forms.

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  2. I am starting a senior thesis project with a UMD student on the Tonoloway, and was there last Wednesday. Having seen clear evidence for evaporation in the halite hoppers, I wonder whether the parallel structure you show in the Mountain Beltway blog might be seafloor aragonite precipitate structures indicative of high alkalinity? I have seen similar examples in Neoproterozoic cap carbonates and in other strata where there was apparently high alkalinity. I note that the structures seem to end abruptly, so they might have been drowned by the next sedimentary event. I would make a thin section of these both across and with the bedding to see if these palisade structures persist and to note whether they have square terminations (indicative of aragonite).

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