Merguerian, Charles,
2004, Brittle fault chronology of New York City (NYC): Geological Society of America Abstracts with
Programs, v. 36, no. 2, p. 73.
Geologic mapping in the NYC Water Tunnel system has confirmed that five generations of brittle faults cut sheared granulite facies Proterozoic orthogneiss and imbricated Paleozoic bedrock units in NYC. From oldest to youngest, they include NW-trending gently SW-dipping normal- and reverse faults (Group A), ENE-trending faults with moderate to steep dips (Group B), lengthy subhorizontal faults and fractures (Group C), and steep dip-slip NNE-trending faults (Group D) with thick, clay- and zeolite-rich highly brecciated gouge zones. These are cut by NNW-trending strike-slip faults of the “Manhattanville” fault set (Group E), characterized by sharp, quartz-filled contacts. Reactivation and mineralization of older faults is quite common. The mineralization typically starts with stilbite +/- heulandite, followed by calcite and a spray of secondary zeolites (stilbite, apophylite, analcime, and chabazite), then by pyrite. The ages of older faults is difficult to ascertain but the faults of Groups D and E offset a swarm of late Paleozoic (295 Ma) glassy rhyodacite dikes in the Queens Tunnel. Field mapping throughout NYC area has shown that NW-trending faults (Group E) are the youngest structural geologic features found in the region.
In the
Filename: CM2004.htm