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What Do All Those Lines, Colors, and Symbols Represent?
Title Page
Introduction
What is a Geologic Map?
What is a Geologic Map Used For?
Why are Geologic Maps Important?
Hasn’t It Been Mapped Before?
What Do All Those Lines, Colors,
and Symbols Represent?
How is a Geologic Map Made?
References
Each of these map units provides important clues to the geologic
history of the region, and to nearby geologic resources and geologic
hazards.
The photograph below shows the Virgin River (at extreme lower right)
and associated floodplain sediments (Qal1). Here, the Virgin River
has eroded into the Kayenta Formation (Jk), which reveals rock layers
tilted to the left.
The Kaytena beds are overlain by a remnant of a much younger, nearly
horizontal lava flow (Qb). Old river gravels (Qal3) now form a high
terrace to the right, and talus (Qmt, angular blocks that tumbled
downhill) covers much of the steep slope below the lava flow.
Photograph showing the relationship between the landscape and several
map unit symbols.
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As for all those bright map colors and strange symbols, well, think
of them as geologic shorthand. They may appear cryptic, but each
geologic map is accompanied by a chart that explains what each line,
color, and symbol means.
Each map color, for example, represents a unique map unit - a group
of rocks or sediments sufficiently distinct in age, composition,
or environment of deposition so as to be differentiated from all
other map units. By tracing map units across the countryside, geologists
can locate earthquake faults, folds, and other geologic structures.
Each map unit is also identified by a unique symbol. The first
letter of these symbols is capitalized and denotes the age of the
unit, while subsequent lower-case letters identify the name of the
map unit.
The symbol TRmu, for example, is shorthand for the Triassic-age
(TR) upper red member (u) of the Moenkopi Formation (m), a sequence
of red mudstone and fine-grained sandstone deposited in a tidal-flat
environment about 240 million years ago.
Other lines and symbols on a geologic map provide information on
geologic structures such as faults (normal and thrust), folds (anticlines
and synclines), and the orientation (strike and dip) of rock layers,
among other things.
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