The earliest Miocene strata on the Middle Atlantic Coastal Plain were deposited in two distinct marine transgressions separated by a hiatus in sedimentation of approximately one million years. The older unit (Bed 3A of the Calvert Formation and its correlatives) was deposited in a relatively restricted basin of middle Burdigalian (middle early Miocene) age. The younger unit (Bed 3B of the Calvert Formation and its correlatives) was deposited in a much more widespread basin of late Burdigalian (late early Miocene) age. The older deposit was completely overlapped by the younger deposit. These two beds of substantially differing geologic age are difficult, if not impossible, to distinguish solely by lithostratigraphy. They are, however, readily differentiated on the basis of their distinctive silicoflagellate and diatom assemblages.