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Spatial Extent of Data

ISO 19115 Topic Category

Other Subject Keywords

Mine Run Complex, Metabasalt, Sedgefield Member, Chopawamsic Formation, Paragneiss, Marshall Metagranite, Mylonite, Colluvium, Chowan River Formation, Battle Mountain Alkali Feldspar Granite, Hornblendite, Medium-grained mixed clastic rock, Slate, Diorite, Felsic metavolcanic rock, Windsor Formation, Monumental Mills Formation, Mafic volcanic rock, Hickory Grove Basalt, Poquoson Member, Felsic gneiss, Porphyry, Reston Member, Arkose, Granitoid, Volcanic rock, Pyroxenite, Phyllonite, Intermediate volcanic rock, Schist, Purcell Branch Formation, Dale City Quartz Monzonite, Falls Church Intrusive Suite, Sandstone, Occoquan Granite, Arenite, Basalt, Old Mill Branch Metasiltstone Member, Siltstone, Serpentinite, Amphibolite, Fauquier Group, Diabase, Alluvium, Charlottesville Formation, Yorktown Formation, Swift Run Formation, Bear Island Granodiorite, Coarse-grained mixed clastic rock, Waterfall Formation, Gravel, Station Hills Phyllite Member, Lake Barcroft Metasandstone, Mica schist, Laurel Mills Granite, Piney Branch Complex, Tectonite, Calvert Formation, Granitic gneiss, Gabbro, Mafic metavolcanic rock, Robertson River Igneous Suite, Trondhjemite, Catoctin Formation, Conglomerate, Indian Run Formation, Metavolcanic rock, Calc-silicate rock, Intermediate metavolcanic rock, Goose Creek Member, Garrisonville Mafic Complex, Granodiorite, Midland Formation, Kensington Tonalite, Fine-grained mixed clastic rock, Lunga Reservoir Formation, Norite, Quartz monzodiorite, Biotite gneiss, Mather Gorge Formation, Mass wasting material, Mount Zion Church Basalt, Quartz diorite, Quantico Formation, Sand, Lake or marine sediment, Felsic volcanic rock, Keratophyre, Amphibole schist, Graywacke, Sedimentary rock, Marble, Georgetown Intrusive Suite, Weverton Formation, Shirley Formation, Migmatite, Silt, Mixed carbonate/clastic rock, Peridotite, Metasedimentary rock, Bunker Hill Formation, Greenstone, Andesite, Gabbroid, Metamorphic rock, Granofels, Gneiss, Tibbstown Formation, Ball Mountain Formation, Tabb Formation, Lynnhaven Member, Pegmatite, Wacke, Shale, Annandale Group, Mudstone, Carter Run Formation, Unconsolidated material, Swains Mountain Formation, Sander Basalt, Catharpin Creek Formation, Flint Hill Gneiss, Clastic rock, Lamprophyre, Manassas Sandstone, Dacite, Laurel Formation, Choptank Formation, Accotink Schist, Clarendon Granite, Harpers Formation, Marlboro Clay, Tholeiite, Potomac Formation, Melange, Quartz syenite, Plutonic rock, Millbrook Quarry Member, Aplite, Pelitic schist, Phyllite, Syenite, Chilhowee Group, Ultramafic intrusive rock, Monzonite, Balls Bluff Siltstone, Pyroclastic rock, Bacons Castle Formation, Quartzite, Cobbler Mountain Alkali Feldspar Quartz Syenite, Severn Formation, Tonalite, Mountain Run Member, Metaconglomerate, Volcanic breccia, Granite, Hornfels, Lynchburg Group, Yorkshire Formation, Aquia Formation, Turkey Run Formation, Greenschist, Dalecarlia Intrusive Suite, Popes Head Formation, Brightseat Formation, Metarhyolite, Mixed volcanic/clastic rock, Quartz monzonite, Nanjemoy Formation, Charles City Formation, Sykesville Formation

Database for the geologic map of the Washington West 30' x 60' quadrangle, Maryland, Virginia, and Washington D.C.

The database for the Washington West 30- by 60-minute quadrangle covers an area of approximately 4,884 square kilometers (1,343 square miles) in and west of the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area. The eastern part of the area is highly urbanized, and more rural areas to the west are rapidly being developed. The area lies entirely within the Chesapeake Bay drainage basin and mostly within the Potomac River watershed. It contains part of the Nation's main north-south transportation corridor east of the Blue Ridge Mountains, consisting of Interstate Highway 95, U.S. Highway 1, and railroads, as well as parts of the Capital Beltway and Interstate Highway 66. Extensive Federal land holdings in addition to those in Washington, D.C., include the Marine Corps Development and Education Command at Quantico, Fort Belvoir, Vint Hill Farms Station, the Naval Ordnance Station at Indian Head, the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal National Historic Park, Great Falls Park, and Manassas National Battlefield Park. The quadrangle contains most of Washington, D.C.; part or all of Arlington, Culpeper, Fairfax, Fauquier, Loudoun, Prince William, Rappahannock, and Stafford Counties in northern Virginia; and parts of Charles, Montgomery, and Prince Georges Counties in Maryland. The Washington West quadrangle spans four geologic provinces. From west to east these provinces are the Blue Ridge province, the early Mesozoic Culpeper basin, the Piedmont province, and the Coastal Plain province. There is some overlap in ages of rocks in the Blue Ridge and Piedmont provinces. The Blue Ridge province, which occupies the western part of the quadrangle, contains metamorphic and igneous rocks of Mesoproterozoic to Early Cambrian age. Mesoproterozoic (Grenville-aged) rocks are mostly granitic gneisses, although older meta-igneous rocks are found as xenoliths. Small areas of Neoproterozoic metasedimentary rocks nonconformably overlie Mesoproterozoic rocks. Neoproterozoic granitic rocks of the Robertson River Igneous Suite intruded the Mesoproterozoic rocks. The Mesoproterozoic rocks are nonconformably overlain by Neoproterozoic metasedimentary rocks of the Fauquier and Lynchburg Groups, which in turn are overlain by metabasalt of the Catoctin Formation. The Catoctin Formation is overlain by Lower Cambrian clastic metasedimentary rocks of the Chilhowee Group. The Piedmont province is exposed in the east-central part of the map area, between overlapping sedimentary units of the Culpeper basin on the west and those of the Coastal Plain province on the east. In this area, the Piedmont province contains Neoproterozoic and lower Paleozoic metamorphosed sedimentary, volcanic, and plutonic rocks. Allochthonous mélange complexes on the western side of the Piedmont are bordered on the east by metavolcanic and metasedimentary rocks of the Chopawamsic Formation, which has been interpreted as part of a volcanic arc. The mélange complexes are unconformably overlain by metasedimentary rocks of the Popes Head Formation. The Silurian and Ordovician Quantico Formation is the youngest metasedimentary unit in this part of the Piedmont (Pavlides and others, 1980). Igneous rocks include the Garrisonville Mafic Complex, transported ultramafic and mafic inclusions in mélanges, monzogranite of the Dale City pluton, and Ordovician tonalitic and granitic plutons. Jurassic diabase dikes are the youngest intrusions. The fault boundary between rocks of the Blue Ridge and Piedmont provinces is concealed beneath the Culpeper basin in this area but is exposed farther south (Mixon and others, 2000). Early Mesozoic rocks of the Culpeper basin unconformably overlie those of the Piedmont and Blue Ridge provinces in the central part of the quadrangle. The north-northeast-trending extensional basin contains Upper Triassic to Lower Jurassic nonmarine sedimentary rocks. Lower Jurassic sedimentary strata are interbedded with basalt flows, and both Upper Triassic and Lower Jurassic strata are intruded by diabase of Early Jurassic age. The Bull Run Mountain fault, a major Mesozoic normal fault characterized by down-to-the-east displacement, separates rocks of the Culpeper basin from those of the Blue Ridge province on the west. On the east, the contact between rocks of the Culpeper basin and those of the Piedmont province is an unconformity which has been locally disrupted by normal faults. Sediments of the Coastal Plain province unconformably overlie rocks of the Piedmont province along the Fall Zone and occupy the eastern part of the quadrangle. Lower Cretaceous deposits of the Potomac Formation consist of fluvial-deltaic gravels, sands, silts, and clays. Discontinuous fluvial and estuarine terrace deposits of Pleistocene and middle to late Tertiary age flank the modern Potomac River valley unconformably capping these Cretaceous strata and the crystalline basement where the Cretaceous has been removed by erosion. East of the Potomac River, the Potomac Formation is onlapped and unconformably overlain by a westward thinning wedge of marine sedimentary deposits of Late Cretaceous and early and late Tertiary age. Basement rooted Coastal Plain faults of Tertiary to Quaternary age occur along the Fall Zone and this part of the inner Coastal Plain. These Coastal Plain faults have geomorphic expression that appear to influence river drainage patterns (Mixon and others, 1972; Seiders and Mixon, 1981; Fleming and others, 1994).

Get Data and Metadata
Author(s) Peter Lyttle, John N Aleinikoff orcid, William C Burton orcid, Ernest A Crider, Avery Jr., Albert Froelich, Gregorios Kasselas, Robert Mixon, Lucy McCartan, Arthur E Nelson, Wayne Newell, Louis Pavlides, David Powars, C. Scott Southworth orcid, Robert E. Weems orcid
Publication Date 2025-02-25
Beginning Date of Data 2025-01-31
Ending Date of Data 2025-01-31
Data Contact
DOI https://doi.org/10.5066/P13NUH8Z
Citation Lyttle, P., Aleinikoff, J.N., Burton, W.C., Crider, E.A., Jr., A., Froelich, A., Kasselas, G., Mixon, R., McCartan, L., Nelson, A.E., Newell, W., Pavlides, L., Powars, D., Southworth, C.S., and Weems, R.E., 2025, Database for the geologic map of the Washington West 30' x 60' quadrangle, Maryland, Virginia, and Washington D.C.: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P13NUH8Z.
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Metadata Date 2025-02-25
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Citations of these data No citations of these data are known at this time.
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License http://www.usa.gov/publicdomain/label/1.0/
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Harvest Source: ScienceBase
Harvest Date: 2025-02-26T21:09:54.738Z