
Location of the Onondaga limestone outcrop in New York State, USA and Ontario, Canada.
The 'Onondaga Formation' is a group of hard
limestones and
dolostones of
Devonian age that form an important geographic feature in the area of outcrop.
In upstate
New York and southern
Ontario the sedimentary rocks tend to slope slightly to the southward, and the Onondaga outcrops in a line that usually forms an
escarpment (the steep face of a
cuesta), because of its resistance to erosion. The outcrop can be traced from the
Hudson River valley westward along the southern rim of the
Mohawk River valley, passing just south of
Syracuse, and along the northern heads of the major
Finger Lakes to
Buffalo, New York. From
Fort Erie, Ontario it runs to
Windsor just north of the
Lake Erie shoreline, becoming less prominent as one travels westward. It is not distinct west of Windsor.
In several spots it is breached by geologically young
streams and spectacular waterfalls are formed, such as at
Chittenango Falls just east of Syracuse,
Oatka Falls at
Le Roy, New York and
Indian Falls west of
Batavia.
A few other breaches occur in older valleys, which likely once had waterfalls, but
erosion eventually obliterated them. Such breaches occur at the
Tully valley, the
Genesee River valley near
Avon, New York, and at
Port Colborne, Ontario, where the old valley forms a harbor on Lake Erie.
The formation is broken by the only major fault line in western New York, the
Linden Fault just east of Batavia, where the eastern side of the fault has dropped down and the ledge moved southward relative to the western side. On the western side of the fault in
Genesee County the escarpment achieves its greatest prominence. The
New York State Thruway has a rock cut at Batavia which clearly shows the fault and is a popular point for geology class field trips. The
fault, which runs from
Attica, New York northward to Lake Ontario, is still active and periodically causes minor earthquakes in the area.
The Onondaga Formation also can be found in other areas where rocks of the same age outcrop, such as in western
Pennsylvania and
Michigan but they do not form prominent geographic features.
A similar and more prominent outcrop known as the
Niagara Escarpment runs parallel and about 25 miles (40 kilometers) to the north through upstate New York, but curves northwestward in southern Ontario toward
Lake Huron and eventually into Michigan's
Upper Peninsula and Wisconsin's
Door Peninsula.
External link
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Photo of Chittenango Falls