Southeastern Section - 58th Annual Meeting (12-13 March 2009)

Paper No. 2
Presentation Time: 8:50 AM

THE U.S. GEOLOGIC NAMES LEXICON (GEOLEX) AND THE SUNSHINE STATE


STAMM, Nancy, U.S. Geological Survey, MS 926A National Center, Reston, VA 20192 and SOLLER, David R., U.S. Geological Survey, 926A National Ctr, Reston, VA 20192-0001, nstamm@usgs.gov

In the late 1800's, the U.S. Geological Survey, under the leadership of Director John Wesley Powell, began a systematic mapping program that produced the Geologic Atlas of the United States folios. Recognizing the need for a consistent set of geologic maps, he formed committees to develop standards for cartography, principles of rock and sediment classification and nomenclature, and a geological time scale. Essential to these standards and to the Atlas series was a catalog of geologic names of the U.S.

The catalog of geologic names remains essential to this day, both to the science and to preparation of the U.S. National Geologic Map Database (NGMDB, http://ngmdb.usgs.gov), which is a collaborative project managed by the USGS and the Association of American State Geologists as mandated by Congress.

For the State of Florida, GEOLEX contains ~200 geologic units, and provides original and revised definitions, type localities, geologic ages, geographic extent, variations in geologic name usage, and publication synopses. Information has been compiled mostly from formal reports and maps published since the mid-1800's, emphasizing outcrop-level descriptions, age determinations, and relationships to other geologic units. These reports are quite varied in nature, and the publishers range from local societies to state and national agencies. For each report, the stratigraphic interpretations are considered valid if the guidelines of the North American Stratigraphic Code are followed. This raises a challenge, to balance the varied stratigraphic interpretations in these reports with the need to provide a standard definition for each geologic unit.

For a century, the U.S. Geologic Names Committee (GNC) has assisted geologists in their efforts to define and clarify the nation's stratigraphy (e.g., variation in nomenclature of identical rock units on different sides of State boundaries). Committee activities have been recorded in certain formal publications, but there also remains a valuable collection of unpublished notes which are used on a regular basis to maintain GEOLEX. We are scanning these notes, to make them accessible to the stratigrapher.