DGS Bulletins
Permanent URI for this collection
Browse
Browsing DGS Bulletins by Subject "Atlantic Coastal Plain"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Stratigraphy Of The Post-Potomac Cretaceous-Tertiary Rocks Of Central Delaware(Newark, DE: Delaware Geological Survey, University of Delaware, 1996) Benson, R.N.; Spoljaric, N.This Bulletin presents the subsurface stratigraphy of the post-Potomac Cretaceous and Tertiary rocks of the Atlantic Coastal Plain of central Delaware, between the Chesapeake and Delaware (C & D) Canal and Dover. Geophysical log correlations supported by biostratigraphic and lithologic data from boreholes in Delaware and nearby New Jersey provide the basis for the report. The stratigraphic framework presented here is important for identifying subsurface stratigraphic units penetrated by the numerous boreholes in this part of Delaware, particularly those rock units that serve as aquifers, because such knowledge allows for better prediction at ground-water movement and availability. Also, accurate stratigraphy is a prerequisite for interpreting the geologic history of the rocks and for the construction of maps that depict the structure and thickness of each unit.Item Water Resources Of Sussex County, Delaware(Newark, DE: Delaware Geological Survey, University of Delaware, 1960-12) Rasmussen, W.C.; Wilkens, R.A.; Beall, R.M.; OthersSussex County is in the Atlantic Coastal Plain. Its relatively flat, featureless topography is characterized by two terrace-like surfaces; the lower one rises from sea level to about 40 feet above sea level, and the higher one rises inland from 40 to about 60 feet above sea level. Peculiar landforms of low relief, broad ovals, similar to the "Carolina bays,” and to the “New Jersey basins" are common on the sandy flat divides in Sussex County. Hydrologically, they are sites of much ground-water discharge, by evapotranspiration, from meadow and marsh of lush vegetation.