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Geology of the Petersburg batholith, eastern Piedmont, Virginia Geology of the Petersburg batholith, eastern Piedmont, Virginia

The 295-300 Ma Petersburg batholith in east-central Virginia forms one of the largest and northernmost of the Alleghanian plutonic complexes in the southern Appalachian Piedmont. The batholith is primarily composed of granite including massive and foliated (both magmatic and solid-state fabrics) varieties. The plutonic complex intruded medium-grade metamorphosed volcanic/plutonic rocks...
Authors
Brent Owens, Mark Carter, Christopher Bailey

Post-rift magmatic evolution of the eastern North American “passive-aggressive” margin Post-rift magmatic evolution of the eastern North American “passive-aggressive” margin

Understanding the evolution of passive margins requires knowledge of temporal and chemical constraints on magmatism following the transition from supercontinent to rifting, to post-rifting evolution. The Eastern North American Margin (ENAM) is an ideal study location as several magmatic pulses occurred in the 200 My following rifting. In particular, the Virginia-West Virginia region of...
Authors
Sarah Mazza, Esteban Gazel, Elizabeth Johnson, Michael Bizmis, Ryan J. McAleer, C. Biryol

Geology and biostratigraphy of the Potomac River cliffs at Stratford Hall, Westmoreland County, Virginia Geology and biostratigraphy of the Potomac River cliffs at Stratford Hall, Westmoreland County, Virginia

The cliffs along the Potomac River at Stratford Hall display extensive exposures of Miocene marine strata that belong successively to the Calvert, Choptank, St. Marys, and Eastover Formations. Within the lower part of this sequence, in the Calvert and Choptank Formations, there is well-developed cyclic stratigraphy. Above the Miocene units lies the marginal marine to deltaic Pleistocene...
Authors
Robert Weems, Lucy Edwards, Bryan Landacre

Geology along the Blue Ridge Parkway in Virginia Geology along the Blue Ridge Parkway in Virginia

Detailed geologic mapping and new SHRIMP (sensitive high-resolution ion microprobe) U-Pb zircon, Ar/Ar, Lu-Hf, 14C, luminescence (optically stimulated), thermochronology (fission-track), and palynology reveal the complex Mesoproterozoic to Quaternary geology along the ~350 km length of the Blue Ridge Parkway in Virginia. Traversing the boundary of the central and southern Appalachians...
Authors
Mark Carter, C. Southworth, Richard Tollo, Arthur Merschat, Sara Wagner, Ava Lazor, John Aleinikoff

Biological response to climate change in the Arctic Ocean: The view from the past Biological response to climate change in the Arctic Ocean: The view from the past

The Arctic Ocean is undergoing rapid climatic changes including higher ocean temperatures, reduced sea ice, glacier and Greenland Ice Sheet melting, greater marine productivity, and altered carbon cycling. Until recently, the relationship between climate and Arctic biological systems was poorly known, but this has changed substantially as advances in paleoclimatology, micropaleontology...
Authors
Thomas Cronin, Matthew Cronin

A simple rubric for Stratigraphic Fidelity (β) of paleoenvironmental time series A simple rubric for Stratigraphic Fidelity (β) of paleoenvironmental time series

The Pliocene, specifically the late Pliocene, has been a focus of paleoclimate research formore than 25 years. Synoptic regional and global reconstructions along with high-resolution time-series have produced nuanced conceptual models of paleoenvironmental conditions and enhanced our understanding of climate variability and climate sensitivity from the Late Pliocene, the most recent...
Authors
Harry Dowsett, Marci Robinson, Kevin Foley

Linking the Central and Southern Appalachian Blue Ridge: What We Know and Don’t Know about Stratigraphy, Structure, Tectonism, and Regional Correlation in the Eastern Blue Ridge of Virginia Linking the Central and Southern Appalachian Blue Ridge: What We Know and Don’t Know about Stratigraphy, Structure, Tectonism, and Regional Correlation in the Eastern Blue Ridge of Virginia

The transition from Neoproterozoic Lynchburg Group rocks on the eastern limb of the para-autochthonous Blue Ridge anticlinorium in central Virginia to the fault-bounded Ashe Formation and Alligator Back Formation in southern Virginia has been a source of intense debate and speculation for decades. There are fundamental differences in the tectonogenetic interpretation for these rock...
Authors
Mark Carter, Arthur Merschat

The Carolina Sandhills: Quaternary eolian sand sheets and dunes along the updip margin of the Atlantic Coastal Plain province, southeastern United States The Carolina Sandhills: Quaternary eolian sand sheets and dunes along the updip margin of the Atlantic Coastal Plain province, southeastern United States

The Carolina Sandhills is a physiographic region of the Atlantic Coastal Plain province in the southeastern United States. In Chesterfield County (South Carolina), the surficial sand of this region is the Pinehurst Formation, which is interpreted as eolian sand derived from the underlying Cretaceous Middendorf Formation. This sand has yielded three clusters of optically stimulated...
Authors
Christopher Swezey, Bradley Fitzwater, G. Whittecar, Shannon Mahan, Christopher Garrity, Wilma Aleman-Gonzalez, Kerby Dobbs

Geology of the western Piedmont in Virginia Geology of the western Piedmont in Virginia

No abstract available.
Authors
James Hibbard, James Beard, William Henika, J. Horton

Geology of the eastern Piedmont in Virginia Geology of the eastern Piedmont in Virginia

No abstract available.
Authors
J. Horton, Brent Owens, Paul Hackley, William Burton, Paul Sacks, James Hibbard

Karst Karst

Karst areas present unique hydrologic and hydrogeological characteristics that are often challenging to investigate. These characteristics are largely dependent on the extent of development of solution conduits within the underlying bedrock, and the resulting integration of surface and subsurface drainage components into a karst aquifer system. The investigation and characterization of...
Authors
C.J. Taylor, D.H. Doctor

Calcareous microfossil-based orbital cyclostratigraphy in the Arctic Ocean Calcareous microfossil-based orbital cyclostratigraphy in the Arctic Ocean

Microfaunal and geochemical proxies from marine sediment records from central Arctic Ocean (CAO) submarine ridges suggest a close relationship over the last 550 thousand years (kyr) between orbital-scale climatic oscillations, sea-ice cover, marine biological productivity and other parameters. Multiple paleoclimate proxies record glacial to interglacial cycles. To understand the climate...
Authors
R. Marzen, Lauren DeNinno, Thomas Cronin
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