Geologic Map of the Bedford 30- x 60-minute Quadrangle, Indiana
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Abstract
The Geologic Map of the Bedford 30- x 60-minute Quadrangle shows the Mississippian and lower Pennsylvanian bedrock units and the overlying Pleistocene and Holocene deposits distributed over eight counties. The mapped area includes five physiographic divisions of the Southern Hills and Lowlands Region in south-central Indiana. Bedrock units and unconsolidated deposits were characterized by outcrop field observations, and new and archived borehole data. Bedrock data was consolidated into a single mapping database, which was then processed using gridding and contouring tools in ArcGIS Pro, resulting in rock formation contact lines, mappable at 1:100,000 scale. Additional information used to delineate contacts for unconsolidated deposits was based upon Indiana Department of Natural Resources water well database and soils data from the Soil Survey Geographic (SSURGO) database. Light detection and ranging (LiDAR) digital elevation models were also used to identify landforms and refine contacts between surficial units. The mapped bedrock units, from east to west, range in age from the Borden Group (lower Mississippian) to the Raccoon Creek Group (Lower Pennsylvanian) with the strike oriented generally from northwest to southeast. Quaternary deposits are found in river and stream valleys and filling the Wabash and Scottsburg lowlands with glacial deposits. Quaternary sediments were mostly deposited during the last two major advances of the Laurentide Ice Sheet into south-central Indiana. Brief summaries of all mapped bedrock units and unconsolidated deposits are listed on the map sheet, with more detailed descriptions in the accompanying pamphlet. Bedrock survey drill hole data points are also displayed on the map with corresponding links to expanded drill hole information for each of the survey drill holes listed in the pamphlet.
In addition to the map and pamphlet, a composite spatial data set that conforms to the standardized database schema known as GeMS (Geologic Map Schema) is also available for download from this site. Both ESRI-licensed geodatabase and open shapefile versions of the spatial data set are available for download. Metadata records associated with each element within the spatial data set contain detailed descriptions of their purpose, constituent entities, and attributes.
This geologic map was funded in part through the STATEMAP program supported by the U.S. Geological Survey under Cooperative Agreement No. G21AC10646.
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