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Cincinnati Arch

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 2602:30a:c0e6:47e0:18d8:8f7f:3bc3:9613 (talk) at 21:24, 20 November 2018 (Corrected incorrect information about the Cumberland Saddle. See “Independents hit it big in Southern Kentucky,” article in Oil and Gas Journal, 1985). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Middle Devonian paleogeography

The Cincinnati Arch is a broad structural uplift between the Illinois Basin to the west, the Michigan Basin to the northwest and the Appalachian Basin and Black Warrior Basin to the east and southeast. It existed as a positive topographic area during Late Ordovician through the Devonian Period which stretched from northern Alabama northeastward to the southeastern tip of Ontario. The Nashville Dome of Tennessee and the Jessamine Dome or Lexington Dome[1] of central Kentucky make up the central portion of the arch. In the northern part, north of Cincinnati, Ohio, the Cincinnati Arch branches to form the Findlay and Kankakee arches. The Findlay plunges under Ontario and reappears as the Algonquin Arch further north.[2]

Petroleum was first discovered in a relatively low part of the arch, between the Jessamine and Nashville domes, the Cumberland Saddle, in Cumberland County, Kentucky in 1829. The Saddle and adjoining areas have been significant producers since drilling for oil came to the region in the late 1800s.[2]

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