Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Five old maps

I have an old book called A Picture Map Geography of the United States by Vernon Quinn which just entered the public domain this year (most recent edition was 1959). It's got some funky old maps that are kind of neat to look at. Clicking on each map will take you to a bigger version of it. Here's the first five of them:

new_jersey

maine

pennsylvania

delaware

arizona

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Sunday, December 7, 2008

Iceberg size and transport distance

This image came to my attention the other day via Lutz's Geoberg blog. It's one of the high-res images provided by the newly-launched satellite, the GeoEye-1, which is supplying new images to Google*. The image shows a marginal lake associated with an alpine glacier in Kenai Fjords National Park, Alaska (just south of Seward):


The top of the above image is not north; it's southwest. Mentally rotate it, and you can see that the resolution is a lot better than the current level on Google Earth and Google Maps:


The thing that struck me about the new GeoEye image, aside from its beauty, is the distinct pattern of iceberg sizes in the lake: freshly calved off the glacier, the biggest icebergs are close to their source, while further away the icebergs are smaller. This pattern struck me as being analogous to sediment. Fresh from its source, sedimentary particles are at their largest size, and the further away they travel, the more weathering they experience. This weathering (in particular of the physical variety) tends to break them down into smaller pieces. Adjacent to an orogenic belt, for instance, you tend to find deposition of sedimentary particles shed off the uplifting mountains. As a general rule, these are of the largest sizes and the greatest volume closest to the source, and then particle size and stratum thickness both diminish with increasing distance from the orogen.

For a North American example, consider the Catskill Clastic Wedge, a tick pile of sediments shed off the late Devonian Acadian Orogeny along the east coast. Here's a cross-sectional view** (pre-Alleghany Orogeny deformation) of the wedge, running from the Bay of Fundy west to Michigan:
catskill clastic wedge_web

Same pattern! Coarse stuff, and more volume of stuff, close to the source. Finer stuff, and less volume of stuff, further from the source. Just like the iceberg, except the weathering of the icebergs is mainly thermal, while the weathering of the sediments is physical, accompanied by depositional sorting by the transporting currents of water.

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* An original version of this post misidentified Google as the owners of the GeoEye-1, as opposed to the company called GeoEye, which sells images to Google. Thanks to Bruce Haley for the correction. (updated 8:14AM eastern time on Dec. 9, 2008)
** Image redrawn (by me) from an original in Prothero & Dott (2003).

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Sunday, January 20, 2008

Geology of Maine

The Maine Geological Survey maintains a terrific website with lots of information about the state's umpteen gazillion geological locales.

I feel like you could run a virtual field trip to Maine with the wealth of quality information and and images they have on this site. It's all well illustrated with lots of photos of structures and geologic contacts.

Learn more about the granite dikes at Pemaquid Point Lighthouse.

Or learn about where to find pillow basalts.

Or check out the giant purple crystals at Mount Apatite.

Or check out the distinctive dark feldspars of Maine's only "shonkinite".

It's all there, plus much, much more! Enjoy.

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