Paper No. 18
Presentation Time: 9:00 AM-6:00 PM

GEOLOGIC MAP OF THE PIEDMONT AND BLUE RIDGE IN THE ANNISTON, ATHENS, ATLANTA, CARTERSVILLE, DALTON, GRIFFIN, MACON, MILLEDGEVILLE, THOMASTON, TOCCOA, AND OPELIKA 1-DEGREE X 30-MINUTE,1:100,000-SCALE QUADRANGLES, GEORGIA


CRAWFORD, Ralph F., The Geologic Mapping Institute, 1297 Briardale Lane, Atlanta, GA 30306 and HIGGINS, Michael W., The Geologic Mapping Institute, 1752 Timber Bluff Drive, Clayton, GA 30525-6011, crawford@sprintmail.com

Georgia, the largest state east of the Mississippi River, is naturally divided into 5 topog­raphic/geologic provinces, from northwest to southeast: the Cumberland Pla­teau, Valley and Ridge, Blue Ridge, Piedmont, and Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plains provinces. Most of these prov­inces are separated by faults or fault zones. The Cumberland Plateau province is separated from the Valley and Ridge province by to­pography, though there are lithologic/facies differences as well; the Valley and Ridge province is separated from the Blue Ridge by the Cartersville-Talladega fault/fault zone; the Blue Ridge province is separated from the Piedmont province by the Brevard fault zone. The Coastal Plains overlie the Valley and Ridge, Pied­mont, and Blue Ridge provinces on a major unconformity.