Most Huntersville Chert outcrops are located in southeastern West Virginia and southwestern Virginia, though well logs indicate that it was present deep underground in other states in the region. It represents a deep-water environment during a major transgression event. The chert has a mottled appearance due to a heterogenous structure of pure and discolored chert. The darker chert is heavily fractured and contains impurities such as glauconite pellets, silty and argillaceous grains, organic material, or dolomite and calcite crystals. The chert is at least partially biogenic, as some chert facies are primarily composed of hollow sponge spicules filled with hydrocarbons.[3]Aeolian dust blowing in from hot, dry areas may also be responsible for some of the silica forming the chert.[4] Compared to equivalent formations, the composition of the Huntersville Chert is at least 50% chert.[2]
The uppermost layers of the Huntersville Chert are glauconitic sandstones rich in shells of spiriferidbrachiopods.[1] These layers have been named as the Bobs Ridge Sandstonemember.[2] They are directly overlain by a prominent ash bed, the Tioga Bentonite. The Bobs Ridge Sandstone and Tioga Bentonite indicate uplift and volcanic activity in the region, respectively.[3] The Tioga Bentonite, sometimes called the Tioga Ash Bed or Metabentonite, lies at the base of the Marcellus Shale.[2]
Upper Warren, Lower Warren, Speechely Stray, Speechely, Balltown A, Balltown B, Balltown C, Sheffield, First Bradford, Second Bradford, Third Bradford, Kane