Similarities in stratigraphic sequence, syndepositional topography and tectonics, and regional tectonic setting between the Mohawk Valley, New York, in the Middle Ordovician and the Australian flank of the Timor Trough today support the idea that the Taconic Foreland Basin orginated in an arc‐continent collision. The Trenton Group strata studied ‐ a roughly four million year long sequence correlated by bentonite beds along an 83 km downslope transect in the central Mohawk Valley ‐ represent the continental shelf and outer trench slope. Bank limestones pass upward and downslope into deep water black shales in a manner reminiscent of the lateral and vertical sedimentary sequence on the Sahul Shelf and Australian flank of the Timor Trough. In studying topography, relative depth was measured through reciprocal averaging ordination of benthic macroinvertebrate fossil assemblages. Downslope bathymetric profiles show the development of a horst and graben topography coincident with regional tilting and transgression ‐ a pattern associated with downward flexure of the Australian Plate approaching Timor. The net rate of transgression corresponds to an arc‐continent convergence rate on the order of 2 cm
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