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MA-100 --- Abstract

Lithogeochemical Character of the Near-Surface Bedrock in the Connecticut, Housatonic, and Thames River Basins

Water-Resources Investigations Report 99-4000

By Gilpin R. Robinson, Jr., John D. Peper, Peter A. Steeves, and Leslie A. DeSimone


This data layer shows the generalized lithologic and geochemical (lithogeochemical) character of near-surface bedrock in the Connecticut, Housatonic, and Thames River Basins and several other small basins that drain into Long Island Sound from Connecticut. The area includes most of Connecticut, western Massachusetts, eastern Vermond, western New Hampshire, and small parts of Rhode Island, New York, and Quebec, Canada. Bedrock geologic rock units are classified into 29 lithogeochemical rock units, on the basis of the relative reactivity of their constituent minerals to dissolution and other weathering reactions and the presence of carbonate or sulfide minerals. The 29 lithogeochemical units (28 of which can be found in the study area) can be grouped into 6 major categories: (1) carbonate-rich rocks, (2) carbonate-poor, clastic sedimentary rocks restricted to distinct depositional basins, (3) metamorphosed, clastic sedimentary rocks (primarily noncalcareous), (4) mafic igneous rocks and their metamorphic equivalents, (5) ultramafic rocks, and (6) felsic igneous and plutonic rocks and their metamorphic equivalents. The lithogeochemical rock units are also grouped into nine lithologic and physiographic provinces (lithophysiographic domains), which can be further grouped into three major regions: (1) western highlands and lowlands, (2) central lowlands, and (3) eastern highlands.

 

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Last modified:  Thursday, November 16, 2000
URL: http://ma.water.usgs.gov/projects/MA-100/WRIR_99-4000_abstract.htm