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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Canada
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Newfoundland and Labrador
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North America
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Appalachians
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United States
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Canada
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carbon
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Cenozoic
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Quaternary
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Pleistocene (1)
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Tertiary
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Neogene
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Calvert Formation (1)
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middle Miocene
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Choptank Formation (1)
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Saint Marys Formation (1)
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Paleogene
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Eocene
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lower Eocene
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Aquia Formation (1)
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Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (1)
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economic geology (1)
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faults (2)
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geophysical methods (3)
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ground water (1)
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ichnofossils (1)
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intrusions (1)
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Invertebrata
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isotopes
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stable isotopes
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C-13/C-12 (1)
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Hf-177/Hf-176 (1)
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Mesozoic
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Cretaceous
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Lower Cretaceous
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Albian (2)
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Aptian (2)
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Potomac Group (3)
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Upper Cretaceous
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Cenomanian
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lower Cenomanian (1)
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metals
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hafnium
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Hf-177/Hf-176 (1)
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metamorphic rocks
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metasedimentary rocks
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metasandstone (1)
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metamorphism (1)
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mineralogy (1)
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North America
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Appalachians
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Central Appalachians (1)
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Piedmont (2)
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paleobotany (1)
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paleoclimatology (1)
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paleoecology (3)
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Paleozoic
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lower Paleozoic
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Glenarm Series (1)
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Wissahickon Formation (1)
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palynomorphs
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megaspores (1)
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Plantae
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algae
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nannofossils (1)
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Bryophyta
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Hepaticae (1)
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Pteridophyta
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Lycopsida (1)
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Spermatophyta
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Angiospermae
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Dicotyledoneae (1)
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Gymnospermae (1)
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pollution (1)
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Precambrian
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upper Precambrian
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Proterozoic
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Neoproterozoic
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Ediacaran (1)
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remote sensing (1)
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sea-level changes (1)
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sedimentary rocks
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bone beds (1)
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tectonics (1)
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tunnels (1)
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United States
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Atlantic Coastal Plain (1)
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Chesapeake Bay (3)
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Delaware (1)
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Maryland
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Baltimore County Maryland (1)
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Calvert County Maryland (1)
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Cecil County Maryland (3)
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Charles County Maryland (1)
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Harford County Maryland
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Aberdeen Proving Ground (4)
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Prince Georges County Maryland (1)
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North Carolina (2)
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Pennsylvania
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Lancaster County Pennsylvania (1)
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York County Pennsylvania (1)
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Potomac River (1)
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Salisbury Embayment (1)
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Virginia (2)
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sedimentary rocks
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sedimentary rocks
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bone beds (1)
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GeoRef Categories
Era and Period
Epoch and Age
Book Series
Date
Availability
Homeostatic response of Aptian gymnosperms to changes in atmospheric CO 2 concentrations Available to Purchase
Further detrital zircon evidence for peri-Gondwanan blocks in the central Appalachian Piedmont Province, USA Available to Purchase
Mid-Cretaceous megaspore floras from Maryland, USA Available to Purchase
Cenozoic stratigraphy and structure of the Chesapeake Bay region Available to Purchase
Abstract The Salisbury embayment is a broad tectonic downwarp that is filled by generally seaward-thickening, wedge-shaped deposits of the central Atlantic Coastal Plain. Our two-day field trip will take us to the western side of this embayment from the Fall Zone in Washington, D.C., to some of the bluffs along Aquia Creek and the Potomac River in Virginia, and then to the Calvert Cliffs on the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay. We will see fluvial-deltaic Cretaceous deposits of the Potomac Formation. We will then focus on Cenozoic marine deposits. Transgressive and highstand deposits are stacked upon each other with unconformities separating them; rarely are regressive or lowstand deposits preserved. The Paleocene and Eocene shallow shelf deposits consist of glauconitic, silty sands that contain varying amounts of marine shells. The Miocene shallow shelf deposits consist of diatomaceous silts and silty and shelly sands. The lithology, thickness, dip, preservation, and distribution of the succession of coastal plain sediments that were deposited in our field-trip area are, to a great extent, structurally controlled. Surficial and subsurface mapping using numerous continuous cores, auger holes, water-well data, and seismic surveys has documented some folds and numerous high-angle reverse and normal faults that offset Cretaceous and Cenozoic deposits. Many of these structures are rooted in early Mesozoic and/or Paleozoic NE-trending regional tectonic fault systems that underlie the Atlantic Coastal Plain. On Day 1, we will focus on two fault systems (stops 1-2; Stafford fault system and the Skinkers Neck-Brandywine fault system and their constituent fault zones and faults). We will then see (stops 3-5) a few of the remaining exposures of largely unlithified marine Paleocene and Eocene strata along the Virginia side of the Potomac River including the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum boundary clay. These exposures are capped by fluvial-estuarine Pleistocene terrace deposits. On Day 2, we will see (stops 6-9) the classic Miocene section along the ~25 miles (~40 km) of Calvert Cliffs in Maryland, including a possible fault and structural warping. Cores from nearby test holes will also be shown to supplement outcrops.
Miocene stratigraphy and paleoenvironments of the Calvert Cliffs, Maryland Available to Purchase
Abstract Miocene strata exposed in the Calvert Cliffs, along the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay, Maryland, have a long history of study owing to their rich fossil record, including a series of spectacular shell and bone beds. Owing to increasingly refined biostratigraphic age control, these outcrops continue to serve as important references for geological and paleontological analyses. The canonical Calvert, Choptank, and St. Marys Formations, first described by Shattuck (1904), are generally interpreted as shallowing-up, from a fully marine open shelf to a variety of marginal marine, coastal environments. More detailed paleoenvironmental interpretation is challenging, however, owing to pervasive bioturbation, which largely obliterates diagnostic physical sedimentary structures and mixes grain populations; most lithologic contacts, including regional unconformities, are burrowed firmgrounds at the scale of a single outcrop. This field trip will visit a series of classic localities in the Calvert Cliffs to discuss the use of sedimentologic, ichnologic, taphonomic, and faunal evidence to infer environments under these challenging conditions, which are common to Cretaceous and Cenozoic strata throughout the U.S. Gulf and Atlantic Coastal Plains. We will examine all of Shattuck‚s (1904) original lithologic “zones” within the Plum Point Member of the Calvert Formation, the Choptank Formation, and the Little Cove Point Member of the St. Marys Formation, as well as view the channelized “upland gravel” that are probably the estuarine and fluvial equivalents of the marine upper Miocene Eastover Formation in Virginia. The physical stratigraphic discussion will focus on the most controversial intervals within the succession, namely the unconformities that define the bases of the Choptank and St. Marys Formations, where misunderstanding would mislead historical analysis.
Evaluation of Seismic-Acoustic Analysis Methods for a Real-time UXO Monitoring System Available to Purchase
The Peach Bottom area in the Pennsylvania-Maryland Piedmont Available to Purchase
Abstract The Appalachian Piedmont in south-central Pennsylvania and north-central Maryland contains metasedimentary siliciclastic rocks (phyllites to quartzites) that were deposited largely offshore of Laurentia, prior to and during the early history of the Iapetan Ocean. The Peach Bottom area is centered on the belt of Peach Bottom Slate and overlying Cardiff Quartzite, which is surrounded by the late Neoproterozoic and early Paleozoic rocks of the Peters Creek and Scott Creek (new name) Formations. Their provenance was the Brandywine and Baltimore microcontinents that lay farther offshore of the Laurentian coast. This area also includes an ophiolitic mélange that formed in front of an advancing island arc in Iapetus. All these rocks lay largely undisturbed throughout much of the Paleozoic, experiencing only chlorite-grade greenschist facies metamorphism through deep burial. Alleghanian thrusting associated with the growth of the Tucquan anticline imparted their present widespread, monocline, steep southeast dip of the bed-parallel foliation.
Optimizing decision threshold and weighting parameter for UXO discrimination Available to Purchase
QUANTIFYING TAPHONOMIC BIAS OF COMPOSITIONAL FIDELITY, SPECIES RICHNESS, AND RANK ABUNDANCE IN MOLLUSCAN DEATH ASSEMBLAGES FROM THE UPPER CHESAPEAKE BAY Available to Purchase
Overview of multimethod geophysical system development for enhanced near-surface target detection, discrimination, and characterization Available to Purchase
Geology without borders: A conceptual model for Aberdeen Proving Ground Available to Purchase
Abstract Research by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers at numerous military facilities has shown that a regional geologic approach is the key to cost-effective risk assessment and environmental remediation. This approach addresses the needs of the facility by placing it directly in the larger framework of the land, water, and the people off post who comprise potential contaminant receptors. Application of a regional geologic framework to a large military facility requires extensive research and focused study to establish the overall picture. A regional geologic and geomorphic model was developed for the Aberdeen Proving Ground (APG), located in the headwaters of Chesapeake Bay near Aberdeen, Maryland, USA. Regional geologic information and interpretation of data from over 2000 geologic and water well borings indicate that APG is situated upon Pleistocene terraces of the ancestral Susquehanna River, which unconformably overlie Cretaceous unconsolidated sediments. Pleistocene terraces represent estuarine and fluvial filling of an earlier manifestation of Chesapeake Bay during interglacial periods of high sea level during the past 1.5 m.y. During episodes of low sea level, corresponding to glacial maxima, the Susquehanna River downcut into Pleistocene and Cretaceous deposits. The remnants of at least three and possibly four separate filling cycles, ranging from middle Wisconsin to early Pleistocene in age (youngest to oldest), are present at APG. The geologic and geomorphic model of APG is being used to define aquifer limits and to assess the movement of groundwater for potential impacts to public drinking water supplies on the Aberdeen Peninsula and to Chesapeake Bay.