Some more photos from the Buffalo trip
A few more photos from the Buffalo trip last week... All of these were taken by Victoria, my Honors student.
Here's some malachite in the sandstone of the Whirlpool Formation: the field trip leader suggested this was due to brine flow through these rocks during the Alleghanian ("Alleghenian") Orogeny:
Herringbone structure ("reverse cross bedding") in the Gasport Formation, overlying the DeCew Formation, which appears flat-lying and calm in this photo, but just below this shows disrupted bedding suggestive of seismic activity:
I showcase a sample too big to lug back to the van (ripple marks):
Watch where you stand! In the Niagara Gorge, we see some evidence that the Gorge is widening through mass wasting processes. Here's a small gap / scarp opening up as a block of rock to the right slumps down into the Gorge:
Lastly, on the trip home, we had an obligatory getting-stuck-in-the-mud moment:
Here's some malachite in the sandstone of the Whirlpool Formation: the field trip leader suggested this was due to brine flow through these rocks during the Alleghanian ("Alleghenian") Orogeny:
Herringbone structure ("reverse cross bedding") in the Gasport Formation, overlying the DeCew Formation, which appears flat-lying and calm in this photo, but just below this shows disrupted bedding suggestive of seismic activity:
I showcase a sample too big to lug back to the van (ripple marks):
Watch where you stand! In the Niagara Gorge, we see some evidence that the Gorge is widening through mass wasting processes. Here's a small gap / scarp opening up as a block of rock to the right slumps down into the Gorge:
Lastly, on the trip home, we had an obligatory getting-stuck-in-the-mud moment:
Eventually, we got unstuck and headed back down the road!
Labels: geologists, mass wasting, meetings, nova, primary structures, sediment, teaching, travel








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