Shady Dolomite

The Shady Dolomite is a geologic formation composed of marine sedimentary rocks of early Cambrian age (Cambrian Series 2: 521-509 million years ago). It outcrops along the eastern margin of the Blue Ridge province in the southeastern United States and can be found in outcrops in the states of Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, North Carolina, and Virginia. It can also be found in the subsurface of Kentucky, Ohio, and West Virginia. The Shady is predominantly composed of dolomite and limestone with lesser amounts of mudrock. It contains fossils of trilobites, archaeocyathids, algae, brachiopods, and echinoderms, along with the enigmatic fossil Salterella. The Shady Dolomite was first described by Arthur Keith in 1903 and was named for exposures in the Shady Valley of Johnson County in the state of Tennessee. Near Austinville, Virginia, the Shady hosts ore deposits that have been mined extensively for lead and zinc ore.

Shady Dolomite
Stratigraphic range: Cambrian Series 2
TypeGeological formation
Sub-unitsAustinville, Patterson, and Ivanhoe Members
UnderliesRome Formation, Elbrook Formation
OverliesWeisner Quartzite, Chilhowee Group
Lithology
PrimaryDolomite
OtherLimestone and Shale
Location
RegionAppalachia and Southeastern United States
Type section
Named forShady Valley, Tennessee, USA
Named byArthur Keith - 1903
Country United States
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