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VIRGINIA GEOLOGY

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1998 Geology Summer Field School Radford University ... Karst features, such as caves and sinkholes are common throughout this province ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: VIRGINIA GEOLOGY


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VIRGINIA PHYSIOGRAPHY
MATHEMATICS SCIENCE CENTER
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Go to website http//arcims.mathsciencecenter.info
Then click on Virginia Physiography
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1998 Geology Summer Field School Radford
University
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Courtesy of Virginia Division of Mineral Resources
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Courtesy of USGS
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THE COASTAL PLAIN
  • A region of sedimentary strata consisting of
    sands, muds, and gravels
  • Tidal waters occupy not only the Chesapeake Bay,
    but also lower portions of the James, York,
    Rappahannock and Potomac rivers
  • Extends inland for more than 100 miles and is
    monotonously flat

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Courtesy of Virginia Division of Mineral Resources
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1998 Geology Summer Field School Radford
University
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Courtesy of Carroll Ellis, Physical Geology, 2003
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Courtesy of Carroll Ellis, Physical Geology, 2003
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1998 Geology Summer Field School Radford
University
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1998 Geology Summer Field School Radford
University
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1998 Geology Summer Field School Radford
University
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1998 Geology Summer Field School Radford
University
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1998 Geology Summer Field School Radford
University
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THE PIEDMONT
  • Largest province extending from the Fall Line
    westward to the Blue Ridge Mountains
  • Comprised of a complex of metamorphic and igneous
    rocks, overlain in a few places by Triassic-age
    sedimentary beds
  • Important rocks and minerals include pegmatites,
    slate, kyanite, gold and pyrite

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Courtesy of Virginia Division of Mineral Resources
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1998 Geology Summer Field School Radford
University
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1998 Geology Summer Field School Radford
University
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1998 Geology Summer Field School Radford
University
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The Blue Ridge Mountain
  • A long narrow, northeast-southwest trending
    mountain chain
  • Consists of old Precambrian-age sedimentary and
    volcanic rocks
  • Old Rag Granite is the oldest rock unit dated in
    Virginia at 1.2 billion years
  • The two highest mountains in the state, Mt Rogers
    (elevation 5,719 ft.) and White Top (elevation
    5,520 ft.) are both in the southern Blue Ridge

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Courtesy of Virginia Division of Mineral Resources
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http//www.goodearthgraphics.com
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The Valley and Ridge
  • Composed of folded and faulted 550 to 300
    million-year-old sedimentary rocks
  • Most ridges are held up by resistant sandstone,
    and most valleys are underlain by less resistant
    shale, limestone, and dolostone
  • Karst features, such as caves and sinkholes are
    common throughout this province

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Courtesy of Virginia Division of Mineral Resources
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Courtesy of Virginia Division of Mineral Resources
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The Appalachian Plateau
  • Contains deep narrow valleys and steep, rugged
    mountain sides caused by downcutting by streams
  • Consists of 320 to 280 million-year-old sandstone
    and shale with coalbeds
  • Most of the rock layers are relatively flat-lying
  • Coal is Virginias most important mineral resource

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