Dniversity ol tie State o! New York Bulletin 



Entered as second-class matter August 2, 1913, at the Post Office at Albany, N. Y., under the 



act of August 24, 1912 



Published fortnightly 

 No. 571 ALBANY, N. Y. July 15, 1914 



New York State Museum 



John M. Clarke, Director 

 Museum Bulletin 171 



THE GEOLOGY OF THE SYRACUSE QUADRANGLE 



' BY 



THOMAS CRAMER HOPKINS 



INTRODUCTION 



The Syracuse topographic quadrangle, which is here specially 

 under consideration, includes an area one-fourth of a degree square, 

 in latitude 43°-43° 15' N. and longitude y6°-yG° 15' W. Situated 

 near the geographic center of the State of New York, including 

 part of two of the great physiographic regions of the State, and 

 the outcropping edges of many of the stratigraphic units of the 

 paleozoic rock series, it has many features in common with, and 

 hence may be taken as typical of, a rather broad belt extending east 

 and west through the middle of the State. 



The city of Syracuse is on the. line of the Erie canal; lies at the 

 intersection of the east-west (New York Central and West Shore) 

 and the north-south (Delaware, Lackawanna and Western) rail- 

 ways, and has besides several branch lines radiating from the city 

 and several suburban electric lines. Central location and excellent 

 transportation facilities make it an important commercial center. 



This (|uadrangle is located on the border line between the lake 

 plains on the north and the Alleghany plateau on the south, two of 

 the distinctive physiographic regions of the Slate. It has a varied 

 physiography, which is somewhat intensified by glacial action. Pass- 

 ing across the quadrangle are the outcropping edgqs of the Siluric 

 rocks with the lower and middle Devonic rocks on the hills near the 



