The Kope Formation is one of the three component bedrock formations of the Maquoketa Group that primarily consists of shale (75%) with some limestone (25%) interbedded. In general, it has a bluish-gray color that weathers light gray to yellowish-gray and it occurs in northern Kentucky, southwest Ohio, and southeast Indiana, United States.
Jennette and Pryor (1993) interpret the Kope, along with the Bellevue and Fairview Formations, as a progradational succession on a carbonate ramp. The Kope is the most distal facies of the ramp complex.[2]
The type section of the Wesselman Tongue of the Kope Formation is an east-facing embankment on an unnamed creek that is followed by Wesselman Road in Miami Township, Hamilton County, Ohio. The embankment is 400 feet (120 m) south of Zion Hill bridge.[3]
Among echinoderms, the crinoids Cincinnaticrinus varibrachialis, Ectenocrinus sp., and Iocrinus sp. are present in the Kope. Edrioasteroids and asteroids (starfish), generally rare, are common in overlying formations, and may be present in the Kope.[7]
A very large and unusual fossil, informally named "Godzillus", was discovered in the Kope Formation in 2011 by amateur paleontologist Ron Fine, of the Cincinnati Dry Dredgers.[8] The reassembled fossil had a roughly elliptical shape with multiple lobes[9] totaling almost seven feet (2.1 m) in length and is believed by Fine to have been nine feet-tall (2.7 m) when upright.[10] David L. Meyer, of the University of Cincinnati geology department, believed it to be a fossilized mat of algae.[11] In 2016, Ron Fine, David L. Meyer, and two other scientists published a study implicating that the fossil might not be a new taxon and could instead have been a complex preservation of trilobites.[12]
Age
Relative age dating of the Kope places it in the Late Ordovician period.
^Jennette, D.C., and Pryor, W.A., 1993, Cyclic alternation of proximal and distal storm facies; Kope and Fairview Formations (Upper Ordovician), Ohio and Kentucky: Journal of Sedimentary Petrology, v. 63, no. 2, p. 183-203.
^Meyer, David L.; Brett, Carlton E.; Dattilo, Benjamin F.; Fine, Ron (2016). "Inverted trilobites: Key to complex preservation of an organically textured surface in offshore siliciclastic mudstone and carbonate facies: Kope Formation (Upper Ordovician), Kenton County, Kentucky, USA". PALAIOS. 31 (10): 453–462. Bibcode:2016Palai..31..453M. doi:10.2110/palo.2016.028. ISSN0883-1351. S2CID133052047.
Bibliography
Fossils of Ohio, Bulletin 70, Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Division of Geological Survey, Edited by Rodney M. Feldmann and Merrianne Hackathorn, 577 p., 232 plates (some in color), drawings, maps, and tables, 1996.