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The following is a list of the mapped bedrock units in Pennsylvania. The rocks are listed in stratigraphic order. The rocks are listed in stratigraphic order. [ 1 ]
This region in Pennsylvania, made famous by NASA's LANDSAT images, is the second-largest in the state and home to the famous anthracite fields. The rocks here are severely folded and contain numerous anticlines and synclines that plunge and fold back over each other. There are numerous thrust faults that help create a chaotic mess.
The Pennsylvania Geological Survey, or Bureau of Topographic and Geologic Survey (BTGS), is a geological survey enacted by the Pennsylvania General Assembly "to serve the citizens of Pennsylvania by collecting, preserving, and disseminating impartial information on the Commonwealth's geology, geologic resources, and topography in order to contribute to the understanding, wise use, and ...
South of Tuscarora Mountain in south central Pennsylvania, the lower members of this unit were also mapped as the Montebello Formation. [5] Details of the type section and of stratigraphic nomenclature for this unit as used by the U.S. Geological Survey are available on-line at the National Geologic Map Database. [6]
The New Oxford Formation is a mapped bedrock unit consisting primarily of sandstones, conglomerates, and shales. The New Oxford Formation was first described in Adams County, Pennsylvania in 1929, [1] and over the following decade was mapped in adjacent York County, Pennsylvania [2] and Frederick County, Maryland. [3]
The Gettysburg Formation is a mapped bedrock unit consisting primarily of sandstones, conglomerates, and shales.. The Gettysburg Formation was first described in the Gettysburg area of Adams County, Pennsylvania in 1929, [1] and over the following decade was mapped in adjacent York County, Pennsylvania [4] and Frederick County, Maryland. [5]
The watershed of North Branch Mehoopany Creek has an area of 40.0 square miles (104 km 2). [2] The mouth of the creek is in the United States Geological Survey quadrangle of Forkston. However, its source is in the quadrangle of Meshoppen. [6] The creek's mouth is located within 1 mile (1.6 km) of Forkston. [2]
Brachiopod casts in the Lock Haven, Leberfinger Quarry, Sullivan County, PA The Lock Haven Formation is a Devonian mapped bedrock unit in Pennsylvania , in the Appalachian Mountains of the United States .