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U.S. Geological Survey
Open-File Report 00-351
Online version 1.0

Print On Demand version

Geologic Map and Database of the Salem East and Turner 7.5-Minute Quadrangles, Marion County, Oregon: A Digital Database

By

Terry L. Tolan and Marvin H. Beeson

Digital Database By

Christopher B. DuRoss

 

 

The Salem East and Turner 7.5-minute quadrangles are situated in the center of the Willamette Valley near the western margin of the Columbia River Basalt Group (CRBG) distribution. The terrain within the area is of low to moderate relief, ranging from about 150 to almost 1,100-ft elevation. Mill Creek flows northward from the Stayton basin (Turner quadrangle) to the northern Willamette Valley (Salem East quadrangle) through a low that dissects the Columbia River basalt that forms the Salem Hills on the west and the Waldo Hills to the east. Approximately eight flows of CRBG form a thickness of up to 700Õ in these two quadrangles. The Ginkgo intracanyon flow that extends from east to west through the south half of the Turner quadrangle is exposed in the hills along the southeast part of the quadrangle.

Previous geologic mapping by Thayer (1939) and Bela (1981) while providing the general geologic framework did not subdivide the CRBG which limited their ability to delineate structural elements. Reconnaissance mapping of the CRBG units in the Willamette Valley indicated that these stratigraphic units could serve as a series of unique reference horizons for identifying post-Miocene folding and faulting (Beeson and others, 1985,1989; Beeson and Tolan, 1990). Crenna, et al. (1994) compiled previous mapping in the Willamette Valley in a study of the tectonics of the Salem area.

The major emphasis of this study was to identify and map CRBG units within the Salem East and Turner Quadrangles and to utilize this detailed CRBG stratigraphy to identify and characterize structural features. Water well logs were used to provide better subsurface stratigraphic control. Three other quadrangles (Scotts Mills, Silverton, and Stayton NE) in the Willamette Valley have been mapped in this way (Tolan and Beeson, 1999).

This area was a lowland area of weathered and eroded marine sedimentary when the Columbia River basalts encroached on this area approximately 15-16 m.y. ago. An incipient Coast Range apparently stopped or diverted the fluid lava flows from moving much farther westward toward the coast at this latitude. It is assumed also that an ancestral Willamette River flowed northward through this low-lying area so that water was present as streams and ponds along the flood plain.

 

Files Available for Download
File Name
Description
File Size
slmfinal.pdf
Salem East Quadrangle map as a PDF document. Map is 30 x 35 inches. Scale 1:24,000
4.1 MB
tnrfinal.pdf
Turner Quadrangle map as a PDF document. Map is 30 x 35 inches. Scale 1:24,000
4.2 MB
00351ps.tar.gz
A tarred and gzipped package that contains both maps as Postscript files. Will open into a directory named "00351ps" when unzipped and untarred.
25.6 MB
00351db.tar.gz
The complete database package as a tarred, gzipped file. Will open into a directory named "00351db" when unzipped and untarred.
29.2 MB
README.DOC
Readme file that describes how to use the digital database as a Microsoft Word document
128 Kb
README.TXT
Readme file that describes how to use the digital database as an ASCII text file
36 Kb
README.PDF
Readme file that describes how to use the digital database as a PDF document
276 Kb

 

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This report is also available via Print On Demand:

USGS Information Services, Box 25286,
Federal Center, Denver, CO 80225
telephone: 303-202-4210; e-mail: infoservices@usgs.gov


URL of this page: http://geopubs.wr.usgs.gov/open-file/of00-351
Maintained by: Carolyn Donlin
Created: 1/3/01
Last modified: 1/16/01 (cad)