- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
NARROW
GeoRef Subject
-
all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
-
Canada
-
Eastern Canada
-
Ontario
-
Oak Ridges Moraine (1)
-
-
-
-
United States
-
Illinois
-
Grundy County Illinois (1)
-
La Salle County Illinois (1)
-
Putnam County Illinois (1)
-
-
Indiana (3)
-
Midwest (1)
-
Wabash Valley (2)
-
-
-
commodities
-
water resources (1)
-
-
elements, isotopes
-
carbon
-
C-14 (2)
-
-
hydrogen
-
D/H (1)
-
deuterium (1)
-
tritium (1)
-
-
isotope ratios (1)
-
isotopes
-
radioactive isotopes
-
C-14 (2)
-
tritium (1)
-
-
stable isotopes
-
D/H (1)
-
deuterium (1)
-
O-18/O-16 (1)
-
S-34/S-32 (1)
-
-
-
oxygen
-
O-18/O-16 (1)
-
-
sulfur
-
S-34/S-32 (1)
-
-
-
geochronology methods
-
optically stimulated luminescence (1)
-
paleomagnetism (1)
-
-
geologic age
-
Cenozoic
-
Quaternary
-
Pleistocene
-
Glasford Formation (2)
-
Illinoian (2)
-
upper Pleistocene
-
Wisconsinan (2)
-
-
Wedron Formation (1)
-
-
-
-
Laurentide ice sheet (1)
-
Paleozoic
-
Carboniferous
-
Pennsylvanian
-
Middle Pennsylvanian
-
Carbondale Formation (1)
-
-
-
-
Ordovician
-
Lower Ordovician
-
Prairie du Chien Group (1)
-
-
Middle Ordovician
-
Saint Peter Sandstone (1)
-
-
-
-
-
Primary terms
-
Canada
-
Eastern Canada
-
Ontario
-
Oak Ridges Moraine (1)
-
-
-
-
carbon
-
C-14 (2)
-
-
Cenozoic
-
Quaternary
-
Pleistocene
-
Glasford Formation (2)
-
Illinoian (2)
-
upper Pleistocene
-
Wisconsinan (2)
-
-
Wedron Formation (1)
-
-
-
-
geochemistry (1)
-
geomorphology (1)
-
geophysical methods (2)
-
glacial geology (2)
-
ground water (3)
-
hydrogen
-
D/H (1)
-
deuterium (1)
-
tritium (1)
-
-
hydrogeology (1)
-
isotopes
-
radioactive isotopes
-
C-14 (2)
-
tritium (1)
-
-
stable isotopes
-
D/H (1)
-
deuterium (1)
-
O-18/O-16 (1)
-
S-34/S-32 (1)
-
-
-
oxygen
-
O-18/O-16 (1)
-
-
paleomagnetism (1)
-
Paleozoic
-
Carboniferous
-
Pennsylvanian
-
Middle Pennsylvanian
-
Carbondale Formation (1)
-
-
-
-
Ordovician
-
Lower Ordovician
-
Prairie du Chien Group (1)
-
-
Middle Ordovician
-
Saint Peter Sandstone (1)
-
-
-
-
sedimentation (1)
-
sediments
-
clastic sediments
-
clay (1)
-
cobbles (1)
-
diamicton (1)
-
outwash (2)
-
sand (2)
-
till (4)
-
-
-
stratigraphy (1)
-
sulfur
-
S-34/S-32 (1)
-
-
United States
-
Illinois
-
Grundy County Illinois (1)
-
La Salle County Illinois (1)
-
Putnam County Illinois (1)
-
-
Indiana (3)
-
Midwest (1)
-
Wabash Valley (2)
-
-
water resources (1)
-
-
rock formations
-
Scarborough Formation (1)
-
-
sediments
-
sediments
-
clastic sediments
-
clay (1)
-
cobbles (1)
-
diamicton (1)
-
outwash (2)
-
sand (2)
-
till (4)
-
-
-
Marion-Mahomet Valley
Aquifer systems of the buried Marion-Mahomet trunk valley (Lafayette Bedrock Valley System) of Indiana
Groundwater resources associated with sediments filling the Marion and Mahomet Valley Sections of the Lafayette Bedrock Valley System vary from miniscule to substantial, reflecting the wide range of glacigenic aquifer facies contained in the fill. These aquifer facies include braid-stream deposits that range from thin units within till sequences to immense, valley-filling masses. Also included is a variety of proximal to distal, subaerial to subaqueous, fan and fan-delta deposits; these range from thick masses of ice-proximal, cobbly rubble interspersed with thin diamicts and clays, to thin, discontinuous lentils of sand confined within lacustrine clays. Valley-fill aquifers are confined by capping till units, except where exhumed at the crossings of the Maumee-Wabash Trough (modern Wabash River Valley). A variety of aquifers typically are available within the valley-capping sediments; for this reason, much of the deep valley-fill has not been extensively explored or developed. Some valley-fill aquifers are so thin and/or deeply buried that their exploitation is unlikely, but others are so thick and areally extensive that exploitation easily can support sustainable yields of tens of millions of gallons per day.
The Lafayette Bedrock Valley System of Indiana; Concept, form, and fill stratigraphy
The Lafayette Bedrock Valley System is a complex of bedrock valleys that converge on and diverge from Lafayette, Indiana. The primary trunk valley of the system, composed of the narrow Marion Valley Section on the east and the broad Mahomet Valley Section on the west, is the classic “Teays Valley” of the Midwest. If such a continuous Teays drainage truly existed, it represents only the early part of the history of the Lafayette Bedrock Valley System in Indiana. Origins of the valley parts and their form remain enigmatic. Although the Marion crosses major rock structure, the course and the contrasting forms of the parts reflect structural and lithologic control. Contrasting valley forms, valley deeps, and possible inset benches may reflect one event or multiple events in a single valley, or disparate events in other valleys; or the features may reflect external events, such as incision through forebulge or erosion beneath bursting ice dams. Although the origins of the valley system are conjectural, the fill sequences within give evidence of the nature and timing of the demise of the system. The Marion valley is filled with a plug of old lacustrine and glaciolacustrine sediments included in the Blackford Member of the Banner and Jessup Formations. These sediments were deposited in a lake dammed between ice at the valley bends at Logansport, Indiana, and St. Marys, Ohio. Deposited at the dams were subaqueous fan deposits of coarse-grained outwash and tills of both basal-meltout and sediment gravity-flow origin. The tills include the red claystone-bearing West Lebanon Till Member on the west, and the Wilshire Till Member on the east. An uppermost tongue of the West Lebanon till caps the Blackford lacustrine sediments, indicating southeastward progression of the West Lebanon ice into the lake and ultimately over the entire fill sequence. The relative age of plugging of this valley section is suggested by the West Lebanon, which overlies magnetically reversed (>0.7-m.y.-old; marine isotopic stage 22?) sediments in western Indiana. The plugging of the Marion valley by West Lebanon ice corresponds in time with the plugging of the valley in Ohio by Wilshire ice (and the deposition of the Minford Silts) and marks the end of classic Teays-stage regional drainage. The Mahomet valley subsequently was reexcavated as part of a Metea-Mahomet drainage system, heading in northeastern Indiana. This valley is filled with younger, interfingered outwash and till, which are included in the Mahomet Member and the Brookston Till Member of the Banner and Jessup Formations. These deposits represent aggrading braided stream and fan environments in front of southwestward-advancing Brookston ice. The relative age of plugging of this valley section is given by the Vandalia Till Member of the Glasford Formation, an Illinoian till that caps the valley fill, and by the West Lebanon till, which was apparently cut out prior to valley filling. The final plugging of the Mahomet marks the end of any deeply incised drainage in north-central Indiana. With the demise of the Mahomet drainage outlet, development of an upper Wabash drainage system began. The fill of bedrock valleys south of the Marion-Mahomet trunk valley contains evidence of multiple erosional surfaces. The gradients of these surfaces suggest a merging at Lafayette into early equivalents of the modern Wabash drainage, exiting into the Wabash bedrock valley via the Attica cutoff or across the rock sill above Independence.
Chemical and isotopic indicators of groundwater evolution in the basal sands of a buried bedrock valley in the midwestern United States: Implications for recharge, rock-water interactions, and mixing
Geologic characteristics of the central stretch of the Ticona Channel, north-central Illinois
Geological framework of the Laurentian trough aquifer system, southern Ontario
At the edge of the Laurentide Ice Sheet: Stratigraphy and chronology of glacial deposits in central Indiana
ABSTRACT This field guide provides an updated synthesis of the stratigraphy and chronology of glacial deposits in central Indiana near the southern limit of glaciation in the midcontinent. Central Indiana contains evidence of multiple glaciations—deposits from the last two glaciations (Oxygen Isotope Stages [OIS] 2 [Wisconsin Episode] and 6 [Illinois Episode]) have been the focus of recent stratigraphic and chronologic investigation. New radiocarbon and optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating from outcrop and core has refined the timing of OIS 2 and OIS 6 ice sheet advances, outwash/slackwater aggradation, glacial lake formation, and eolian activity. Radiocarbon ages within or below late Wisconsin till from three sites within 5 km (3 mi) of the late Wisconsin maximum limit indicate an age of 24.0 k cal yr B.P. for maximum OIS 2 ice sheet extent in central Indiana, consistent with chronology from Illinois and Ohio. A subsequent >50 km (31 mi) readvance (21.6 k cal yr B.P.) across central Indiana came within 10 km (6 mi) of the maximum limit and in the western part of the field-trip area, terminated in glacial Lake Eminence. The start of outwash aggradation and associated slackwater sedimentation in the West Fork White River valley and tributaries began ca. 27 k cal yr B.P. and continued until ca. 20.5 k cal yr B.P., representing the timing of ice sheet advance into and out of the paleo–White River drainage basin. Ice sheet advance and retreat rates average ~40 m/yr before and after the global Last Glacial Maximum (ca. 26−21 k cal yr B.P.) when ice was within ~50 km of the late Wisconsin maximum. OSL dating of pre-Wisconsin outwash and glacio-lacustrine sediment return ages between ca. 218 and 127 ka, confirming deposition during OIS 6. These ages document spatially complex sedimentation in bedrock valleys beyond the Wisconsin limit.