Service Description: Map delineation of the different types and ages of Quaternary
deposits supports evaluation of susceptibility to liquefaction, the immediate
application of the work, but serves many other purposes as well. It provides a
framework for interpreting the architecture and history of the Quaternary
sedimentary basins, which is used in estimating earthquake shaking and
modeling the groundwater system. The mapping is also useful in constraining
the ages and histories of offsetting faults, in guiding geotechnical
investigations, and in other engineering, geologic, and archeological
applications.
Service ItemId: 046fbe25ff8f40b5bcdb94806b4324d4
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Max Record Count: 2000
Supported query Formats: JSON
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Description: This report presents a preliminary map and database of Quaternary deposits and liquefaction susceptibility for the nine-county San Francisco Bay region, together with a digital compendium of ground effects associated with past earthquakes in the region. The report consists of (1) a spatial database of fivedata layers (Quaternary deposits, quadrangle index, and three ground effects layers) and two text layers (a labels and leaders layer for Quaternary deposits and for ground effects), (2) two small-scale colored maps (Quaternary deposits and liquefaction susceptibility), (3) a text describing the Quaternary map, liquefaction interpretation, and the ground effects compendium, and (4) the databse description pamphlet. The nine counties surrounding San Francisco Bay straddle the San Andreas fault system, which exposes the region to serious earthquake hazard (Working Group on California Earthquake Probabilities, 1999). Much of the land adjacent to the Bay and the major rivers and streams is underlain by unconsolidated deposits that are particularly vulnerable to earthquake shaking and liquefaction of water-saturated granular sediment. This new map provides a modern and regionally consistent treatment of Quaternary surficial deposits that builds on the pioneering mapping of Helley and Lajoie (Helley and others, 1979) and such intervening work as Atwater (1982), Helley and others (1994), and Helley and Graymer (1997a and b). Like these earlier studies, the current mapping uses geomorphic expression, pedogenic soils, and inferred depositional environments to define and distinguish the map units. In contrast to the twelve map units of Helley and Lajoie, however, this new map uses a complex stratigraphy of some forty units, which permits a more realistic portrayal of the Quaternary depositional system. The two colored maps provide a regional summary of the new mapping at a scale of 1:275,000, a scale that is sufficient to show the general distribution and relationships of the map units but cannot distinguish the more detailed elements that are present in the database. The report is the product of years of cooperative work by the USGS National Earthquake Hazards Reduction Program (NEHRP) and National Cooperative Geologic Mapping Program, William Lettis and & Associates, Inc. (WLA) and, more recently, by the California Division of Mines and Geology as well. An earlier version was submitted to the Geological Survey by WLA as a final report for a NEHRP grant (Knudsen and others, 2000). The mapping has been carried out by WLA geologists under contract to the NEHRP Earthquake Program (Grants #14-08-0001-G2129, 1434-94-G-2499, 1434-HQ-97-GR-03121, and 99-HQ-GR-0095) and with other limited support from the County of Napa, and recently also by the California Division of Mines and Geology. The current map consists of this new mapping and revisions of previous USGS mapping.
Copyright Text: Geology by Keith L. Knudsen, Janet M. Sowers, Robert C.
Witter, Carl M. Wentworth and Edward J. Helley. Digital database by Carl M.
Wentworth, Robert S. Nicholson, Heather M. Wright, and Katherine M. Brown
Spatial Reference: 102100 (3857)
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Spatial Reference: 102100 (3857)
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Spatial Reference: 102100 (3857)
Units: esriMeters
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