THE GEOGRAPHIC LIMITATIONS OF APPALACHIAN BOULDER FIELDS IN RESPECT TO LITHOLOGY
Using the same procedure, a new, high-resolution data base of boulder fields was constructed for Huntingdon County, Pennsylvania and surrounding areas. This search was located exclusively within the valley-and-ridge province. New results indicate that boulder fields in this region do not have a preferred aspect, or facing direction, discounting microclimate effects that may have led to boulder field formation. Boulder fields were, however, controlled primarily by lithology. In this region, they occurred predominantly within the Tuscarora Formation, a meta-quartz arenite. In fact, the density of boulder fields almost exactly paralleled the outcrop area of the Tuscarora Formation: more boulder fields were found in areas with more exposed Tuscarora. Furthermore, the northernmost limit of Tuscarora exposure coincides almost exactly with the line of maximum glacial extent, calling into doubt whether the limit of boulder field formation is controlled by past glaciation or by lithology alone. Although these features may have formed due to intense freeze-thaw cycles, our results suggest the locations of Appalachian boulder fields in central Pennsylvania are primarily controlled by lithology.