Add to Cart
Map units define geologic terrains that include aspects of landscape and underlying depositional sequences. Map-unit boundaries are based primarily on geomorphology and secondarily on lithology. Vertical sequences within a geologic terrain are considered parts of a whole depositional system and may be composed of materials having a range of physical characteristics such as grain size or texture, internal organization, and geometries. In this context, sequences and landforms that compose a particular geologic terrain and that were deposited in a similar depositional environment exhibit certain lateral and vertical relationships to one another. Map-unit definitions are both descriptive and interpretive. Descriptions include the type of geologic materials (for example, clay, silt, or sand); their range in thickness and relative positions within the sequence; total thickness of the sequence; lateral relations to other sequences and individual units; and overall variability of strata thicknesses, continuity, and texture. These definitions summarize the information provided by subsurface data such as water-well records; grain-size analyses, descriptions, and interpretations of down-hole drill and vibracore samples; natural gamma-ray logs; engineering borings; and field observations. Interpretations focus on geologic events and processes that produced the vertical sequences and, where appropriate, associated landscape elements. Interpretations relate landform morphology of surface units and vertical and lateral facies relationships to glacial and postglacial geologic processes. The map-unit descriptions also apply to the geologic cross sections. The cross sections include additional geologic units that are only in the subsurface and, therefore, are not shown on the map or correlation diagram. These units are Qtt of the Lake Michigan sequence
Keywords: statemap, glacial, geologic map, cross section, 3D map, Lake Michigan Sequence, Lake Border Sequence, Wheeler Sequence