Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Ordovician stratigraphy, structure, and karst of the Falling Spring Valley, Alleghany County, Virginia, USA

March 17, 2025

This one-day trip highlights new findings on a preliminary bedrock geologic map that shows results from ongoing geologic mapping in the Falling Spring Valley of Alleghany County, Virginia, USA, which is the southern end of the larger Warm Springs Valley, an elongated anticlinal valley rimmed by Ordovician and Silurian siliciclastic rocks, and which is famous for its thermal springs. This mapping includes stratigraphic, structural, and karst field and lab research focused on the Ordovician strata exposed in the area, the oldest of which is the dolomitic upper part of the Beekmantown Formation (Lower Ordovician, Darriwilian), and the youngest of which is the Juniata Formation (Upper Ordovician, Katian), a sequence of siliciclastic redbeds. Warm Springs Valley is the location of the only known caves in the eastern United States—three at present—with thermal waters flowing in some of their passages. Stops on the trip will highlight key details from mapping efforts, primarily within the structurally deformed Ordovician carbonate sequence that is exposed in the core and limbs of the anticline, as well as the associated karst features that are developed in those carbonate rocks, including results of recent dye traces and water temperature monitoring that have improved our understanding of the karst hydrogeologic systems developed in these strata.

Publication Year 2025
Title Ordovician stratigraphy, structure, and karst of the Falling Spring Valley, Alleghany County, Virginia, USA
DOI 10.1130/2025.0072(05)
Authors John T. Haynes, Richard A. Lambert, Delbert C. Martin, Randall C. Orndorff, Mercer Parker
Publication Type Book Chapter
Publication Subtype Book Chapter
Index ID 70274725
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Florence Bascom Geoscience Center
Was this page helpful?