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Digital Mapping Techniques '03 — Workshop Proceedings
U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 03–471

Science Language for Geologic-Map Databases in North America: A Progress Report

By North American Geologic-Map Data Model Science-Language Technical Team1

ABSTRACT

A standardized language to classify and describe earth materials and their genesis is needed because producers and consumers of geoscience information use names, terms, and icons to communicate information about geologic objects and concepts. To the extent possible in a world of words, standardized terminology is useful to facilitate information exchange.

The Science Language Technical Team of the North American Data Model Steering Committee is a multi-constituency group of geologic-map producers and geologic-map users that, during the period April 2000 to November, 2003, has developed a prototype science-language for the naming and describing of earth materials in geologic-map databases produced by public-sector entities in North America. The classification adopts the following high-level architecture:

Earth material

Igneous material

Hypabyssal rock

Plutonic rock

Plutonic

Hypabyssal

Volcanic rock

Intrusive

Effusive

Volcaniclastic

Composite-genesis material

Metamorphic rock (traditional sense)

Cataclastic rock

Impact-metamorphic material

Sedimentary material

Unconsolidated sedimentary material

Consolidated sedimentary material

These high-level categories fundamentally are genetic: they reflect how the earth material was formed (genetic process, crustal depth). This raises the irony that, although deeper levels of the classification hierarchies are based mainly on what the mapping geologist can see in the outcrop, traditional high-level classification approaches are compound, and link genesis with empirical composition and texture. Lower-level material names descending from each high-level category generally are based on singular textural or compositional criteria, depending on the parental category.

The use of standardized science language in digital geologic-map databases is a new frontier that is likely to evolve with time and experience. With this in mind, we are developing classifications of earth materials that we believe reflect not only how mapping geologists view them but also how such materials might be queried and analyzed in geologic-map databases. No single classification of earth materials will please all workers. However, the schemes we propose hopefully will be clearly understandable, internally consistent, and usable by both data-producer and data-user.

1 INTRODUCTION

1.1 Background

With the increasingly widespread production and use of digital geologic-map databases it has become clear that, to more effectively serve their constituencies, geoscience agencies need to develop several vital pieces of digital infrastructure:

  1. A standard conceptual model for storing digital data, and for manipulating these data in a relational and (or) object-oriented database environment;
  2. Standardized science language that allows geologic materials and geologic structures to be described, classified, and interpreted;
  3. Software tools for entering data into the standardized model at the front end (data-producer) and for extracting the data at the back end (data-user);
  4. Methodologies and techniques for exchanging data sets having different structures and formats.

To attain these objectives, public-sector geologic-mapping entities in the United States and Canada formed a partnership called the North American Data Model Steering Committee (NADMSC, http://geology.usgs.gov/dm/steering). This informal group is sponsored by cooperative agreements between the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the Association of American State Geologists (AASG), and between USGS and the Geological Survey of Canada (GSC). Through the former, NADMSC is linked to the database and standards-development activities of the National Geologic Map Database; through the latter, NADMSC is linked to database-development activities ongoing in Canada under the auspices of the Canadian Geoscience Knowledge Network.

The NADMSC first met early in 1999 to chart a strategy for developing various aspects of a standard geologic-map data model. Identified as a critical activity was the need for standardized science language for use in North America. To meet this task, NADMSC chartered a Science Language Technical Team (SLTT, http://geology.usgs.gov/dm/steering/science.html) that first convened in early 2000. SLTT members were identified in the following ways:

  1. Most participants from the U.S. Geological Survey were identified by Regional Geologic Executives from the USGS Western, Central, and Eastern Regions. This group includes representatives of the geologic-map editorial standards units of the regional publications groups. Additionally, some USGS scientists were appointed by Coordinators of USGS line-item science programs;
  2. Scientists from the Geological Survey of Canada and from selected Provincial geological surveys were identified by Canadian members of the NADMSC;
  3. Scientists from State geological surveys were identified by the Digital Geologic-Mapping Committee of the Association of American State Geologists (AASG);
  4. Scientists from the U.S. Forest Service, National Park Service, U.S. Bureau of Land Management, and Natural Resources Conservation Service were selected by the committee chair;
  5. Academic members of the panel were selected by SLTT subcommittee co-chairs.

The assembled group (Table 1.1.1) represents a cross section of public-sector geologic-map producers and map users in the United States and Canada.

Table 1.1.1 NADMSC Science Language Technical Team committee members (Jonathan C. Matti, Committee chair)
Participant
Affiliation
SLTT Role
Lee Allison Kansas Geological Survey General scientific overview
Brian Berdusco Ontario Geological Survey General scientific overview
Thomas M. Berg Ohio Geological Survey General scientific overview
Sam Boggs, Jr. University of Oregon Sedimentary Subgroup
Eric Boisvert Geological Survey of Canada Sedimentary Subgroup
Andrée M. Bolduc Geological Survey of Canada Sedimentary Subgroup (co-chair)
Mark W. Bultman U.S. Geological Survey Sedimentary Subgroup
William F. Cannon U.S. Geological Survey Metamorphic Subgroup
Robert L. Christiansen U.S. Geological Survey Volcanic Subgroup (co-chair)
Jane Ciener U.S. Geological Survey Geologic-map editorial standards
Stephen P. Colman-Sadd Geological Survey of Newfoundland and Labrador Metamorphic Subgroup
Peter Davenport Geological Survey of Canada General scientific overview
Ron DiLabio Geological Survey of Canada Sedimentary Subgroup (co-chair)
Lucy E. Edwards U.S. Geological Survey Sedimentary Subgroup
Robert Fakundiny New York State Geological Survey General scientific overview
Kathleen M. Farrell North Carolina Geological Survey Sedimentary Subgroup
Claudia C. Faunt U.S. Geological Survey Volcanic and Sedimentary Subgroup
Mimi R. Garstang Missouri Department of Natural Resources General scientific overview
Joe Gregson National Park Service General scientific overview
Thomas D. Hoisch Northern Arizona University Metamorphic Subgroup
J. Wright Horton, Jr. U.S. Geological Survey Metamorphic Subgroup (co-chair)
David W. Houseknecht U.S. Geological Survey Sedimentary Subgroup
Bruce R. Johnson U.S. Geological Survey Volcanic and Metamorphic Subgroup
Robert Jordan Delaware Geological Survey General scientific overview
Ronald Kistlers U.S. Geological Survey Plutonic Subgroup (co-chair)
Alison Klingbyle Geological Survey of Canada Geologic-map editorial standards
Dennis R. Kolata Illinois Geological Survey Sedimentary Subgroup
Elizabeth D. Koozmin U.S. Geological Survey Geologic-map editorial standards
Hannan LaGarry Natural Resources Conservation Service Sedimentary Subgroup
Diane E. Lanep U.S. Geological Survey Geologic-map editorial standards
Victoria E. Langenheim U.S. Geological Survey Plutonic and Sedimentary Subgroups
Reed Lewis Idaho Geological Survey Plutonic and Volcanic Subgroups
Stephen D. Ludington U.S. Geological Survey Volcanic Subgroup (co-chair)
Jonathan C. Matti U.S. Geological Survey Sedimentary Subgroup (co-chair)
James McDonald Ohio Geological Survey Sedimentary Subgroup
David M. Mille U.S. Geological Survey Sedimentary Subgroup (co-chair)
Andrew Moore Geological Survey of Canada Sedimentary Subgroup
Douglas M. Morton U.S. Geological Survey Plutonic Subgroup (co-chair)
Patrick Mulvany Missouri Department of Natural Resources General scientific overview
Carolyn G. Olson Natural Resources Conservation Service Sedimentary Subgroup (co-chair)
Anne R. Poole National Park Service Plutonic and Sedimentary Subgroups
Stephen M. Richard Arizona Geological Survey Metamorphic Subgroup (co-chair)
Andrew H. Rorick U.S. Forest Service Sedimentary Subgroup
William Shilts Illinois State Geological Survey General scientific overview
David R. Soller U.S. Geological Survey Sedimentary Subgroup (co-chair)
Roy Sonenshein U.S. Geological Survey Sedimentary Subgroup
William C. Steinkampf U.S. Geological Survey Volcanic and Sedimentary Subgroups
Douglas B. Stoeser U.S. Geological Survey Plutonic Subgroup
Lambertus C. Struik Geological Survey of Canada General scientific overview
John Sutter U.S. Geological Survey General scientific overview
Harvey Thorleifson Minnesota State Geological Survey Sedimentary Subgroup
Robert J. Tracy Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Metamorphic Subgroup
David Wagner California Geological Survey Volcanic Subgroup
Richard B. Waitt U.S. Geological Survey Sedimentary Subgroup
Peter D. Warwick U.S. Geological Survey Sedimentary Subgroup
Richard Watson U.S. Bureau of Land Management General scientific overview
Gerald A Weisenfluh Kentucky Geological Survey Sedimentary Subgroup (co-chair)
Carl M. Wentworth U.S. Geological Survey Sedimentary Subgroup
Michael L. Williams University of Massachusetts Metamorphic Subgroup
Ric H. Wilson U.S. Geological Survey Volcanic and Plutonic Subgroup
Robert P. Wintsch University of Indiana Metamorphic Subgroup
Michael L. Zientek U.S. Geological Survey Plutonic and Metamorphic Subgroups

1.2 Related science-language efforts

SLTT activities benefited from a series of International Union of Geological Sciences (IUGS) sub-commissions chartered to develop uniform classifications of earth materials:

The International Union for Quaternary Research [INQUA] in the 1970’s sponsored a Commission on Genesis and Lithology of Glacial Quaternary Deposits (Commission C-2). The results of Commission C-2 were published in Goldthwait and Matsch (1988; see Commission summaries in Goldthwaite and others, 1988, p. vii–ix, and Dreimanis, 1988, p. 19–25). The SLTT used this document to develop science language for sedimentary materials of glacial origin.

In a precedent-setting effort, in 1999 the British Geological Survey (BGS) issued four reports (Hallsworth and Knox, 1999; McMillan and Powell, 1999; Gillespie and Styles, 1999; Robertson, 1999) that presented science language for earth materials from a geologic-mapping point of view. The SLTT used these four reports as a starting point for our deliberations. The SLTT adopted major elements of the BGS approach, but found that in order to accommodate North American geologic-mapping traditions and approaches we had to develop slightly modified terminology and taxonomic hierarchies.

Within the United States, an important science-language activity is occurring under auspices of the Federal Geographic Data Committee (FGDC) Geologic Data Subcommittee (http://ncgmp.usgs.gov/fgdc_gds/). The FGDC has developed a draft cartographic standard for polygon, line, and point symbols that depict geologic features on geologic maps and digital displays. Although primarily concerned with cartographic technical specifications, the FGDC cartographic standard contains science-language concepts that ultimately must be integrated with and enlarged upon by the NADMSC SLTT group.

1.3 SLTT Housekeeping

SLTT has conducted its activities without dedicated salary and without a dedicated travel budget. As a result, face-to-face meetings generally were not possible, and SLTT members have boot-legged time from their agency science projects at the expense of project deliverables. The majority of SLTT interactions have been in the form of email discussions and conference calls. Both internal and external evaluation of science-language concepts was facilitated by a web-conference site that stimulated discussion of philosophical and operational issues (see http://geology.usgs.gov/dm/terms/).

Appendix 1 reprints the SLTT charter developed by NADMSC in 1999. Appendix 2 archives memoranda issued by the SLTT chair (J.C. Matti) discussing background issues and outlining guidelines for SLTT activities. These guidelines established the tone for Subgroup deliberations during the period April, 2000 through November, 2003.

Early on, SLTT decided to split into subgroups organized around major classes of earth material:

Ultimately, SLTT recommended to NADMSC that the surficial and sedimentary subgroups merge into a single group, based on three factors: (1) unconsolidated surficial materials are sedimentary in origin; (2) the lithology, physical properties, genesis, and geomorphology of sedimentary and surficial materials are identical; and (3) scientific perspectives\and geologic-mapping experience in the two subgroups complemented each other and provided insights beneficial to both groups. NADMSC sanctioned this recommendation, and the combined sedimentary and surficial subgroups have worked together to develop a single body of science language for unconsolidated and consolidated sedimentary materials.

The SLTT chair selected subgroup co-chairs based on the following criteria: geologic-mapping experience, expertise in their science field, and knowledge of their agency’s role in producing or using geologic-map databases. Subgroup co-chairs reflect a range of American and Canadian constituencies and Federal and State perspectives.

1.4 SLTT activities

20-queries exercise—SLTT’s first order of business tasked each committee member to submit twenty queries to a hypothetical geologic-map database. This exercise had two purposes;

  1. it served as a proxy for a requirements analysis that might be conducted among users of digital geologic-map data, to determine how such products are used and how the geologic data might be structured and organized from the point of view of content and language;
  2. it was a means of getting each SLTT member to think about the science concepts that might be embraced by geologic-map databases, along with the issues and problems associated with naming, relating, and querying information about geologic materials and geologic structures.

Results of the 20-queries exercise revealed that database-users were interested in a broad range of geologic concepts and database targets—ranging from (1) academic queries related to the lithology, genesis, geometry, and age of geologic materials and structures to (2) pragmatic queries targeting what information geologic-map units and geologic structures contain about natural resources, fluid transmissivity (ground water and hydrocarbons), geologic hazards (swelling ground, landslides, earthquake-induced ground-shaking), and land-use planning (landfill siting, ground-water recharge, commercial and residential development, infrastructure siting). The SLTT’s task was to develop science language to facilitate this broad range of potential database queries. Visit http://geology.usgs.gov/dm/steering/teams/design/background.shtml to examine the kinds of subjects reflected by the 20-queries experiment.

Results of the 20-queries exercise were passed along to the NADMSC Data Model Design Team (DMDT) for analysis and (especially) to ensure that science concepts emerging from the SLTT process were considered by DMDT as it developed architecture for a standard geologic-map data model.

Iterative science-language development—Using the 20-queries exercise and building upon the four BGS classification documents, the SLTT subgroups iteratively developed science-language schemes that were exchanged by email among subgroup members. This process continued from about September, 2000 through March, 2003.

Internal SLTT review—After each subgroup completed a consensus classification of earth materials, subgroup documents were submitted for SLTT-wide peer review. This review was intended to ensure uniformity of philosophical and operational approach throughout the SLTT science-language process.

NADMSC review—Following internal SLTT-wide peer review, SLTT science language documents were forwarded to the NADMSC for evaluation and review for consistency, for geopolitical sensitivity, and for compatibility with the data-model architecture being developed by the DMDT.

Community-wide peer review—Following NADMSC approval, the SLTT documents are under final revision and will be released on a website for broad peer review from the North American geologic-mapping community.

1.5 Who prepared this report?

The SLTT chair (Matti) prepared this report in coordination with SLTT subgroup leaders (Table 1.5.1), each of whom contributed to the narratives in Section 3.

Table 1.5.1 SLTT Subgroup leaders who contributed to this report
Andrée M. Bolduc
Geological Survey of Canada
Sedimentary Subgroup
Robert L. Christiansen
U.S. Geological Survey
Volcanic Subgroup
Ron DiLabio
Geological Survey of Canada
Sedimentary Subgroup
J. Wright Horton, Jr.
U.S. Geological Survey
Metamorphic Subgroup
Ronald W. Kistler
U.S. Geological Survey
Plutonic Subgroup
Stephen D. Ludington
U.S. Geological Survey
Volcanic Subgroup
Jonathan C. Matti
U.S. Geological Survey
Sedimentary Subgroup
David M. Miller
U.S. Geological Survey
Sedimentary Subgroup
Douglas M. Morton
U.S. Geological Survey
Plutonic Subgroup
Carolyn G. Olson
Natural Resources Conservation Service
Sedimentary Subgroup
Stephen M. Richard
Arizona Geological Survey
Metamorphic Subgroup
David R. Soller
U.S. Geological Survey
Sedimentary Subgroup
Gerald A Weisenfluh
Kentucky Geological Survey
Sedimentary Subgroup

2 PHILOSOPHICAL AND OPERATIONAL APPROACH

2.1 Purpose

The SLTT purpose is to develop a science-language standard2 for the description, classification, and interpretation of earth materials in geologic-map databases. The language should provide a logical, consistent, hierarchical framework for naming and classifying earth materials, and for describing their physical characteristics and genesis—based on the way geologic maps are made by the field geologist or assembled by a science compiler (Section 2.6.2).

2.2 Intended Use

Science language under development by the SLTT is intended for use by persons and agencies that submit digital geologic-map data into public-domain databases managed by various State/Provincial and Federal agencies. We are not setting standards for use by academia or by the private sector, unless these entities contribute geologic-map products to public databases.

Intended users include:

2.3 Legacy data versus future data

The body of North American geologic-map information has two components: (1) “legacy data” archived in paper maps and digital files as the result of historic geologic mapping, and (2) new data that will be developed through future geologic-mapping. Incorporation of these two kinds of data sets into geologic-map databases involves different kinds of strategies, each posing its own challenge to science language.

North American legacy geologic maps are rich in geologic terminology. Typically, such data are contained either in map-marginal descriptions of map units or in pamphlets and reports that accompany the geologic map. Unfortunately, legacy maps rarely cite the classification systems used by the map maker to name and describe earth materials. Consequently, it is left to the map user to interpret the meaning and usage of terminology. For high-level terms (e.g., sedimentary rock, terrigenous-clastic sediment, plutonic rock, metamorphic rock, volcanic rock) the meaning may be universally understood. However, for deeper-level terms (e.g., shale, mud, basalt, quartz latite, quartz monzonite, granodiorite, volcaniclastic, slate, lahar, greenstone, gneiss, layered gneiss) the meaning may not be clear because many terms have inconsistent usage depending on when and where the map maker learned his or her craft. As a result, the map user commonly must interpret the meaning of earth-material terms according to his or her own experience.

This problem is compounded by two factors:

  1. some geological terms have acquired usages that border on the generic or commonplace, and lack strict definitions or meanings (e.g., sandstone, granite, shale, gneiss);
  2. some terms have been used as though they were lithologic names (e.g., alluvium, greenschist, till, turbidite, metasediment, loess, debris flow, lahar); this practice has blurred the distinction between lithologic description and genetic interpretation.

As a group, the SLTT committee had to wrestle with these issues, and decide on whether our science-language approach (1) should attempt to accommodate historical usage that is diverse, inconsistent, and in some cases generic, or (2) should reflect the needs and requirements of future geologic-map makers for science language that is stable and consistent. Ideally, any such decision will reflect the policy of the database developer, which usually means the management policy of the geologic-mapping agency or entity. With respect to legacy information, two contrasting data-management choices apply:

  1. modern databases should archive and organize legacy terminology verbatim, without attempting to translate such terms into modern science language;
  2. modern databases should interpret and translate legacy terms in the context of modern science-language structures, preserving archival terminology where it is clearly understood in terms of a modern standard but using more generalized terminology where the specific original meaning can not be reconstructed. NOTE: SLTT acknowledges that legacy geologic-map unit descriptions and supportive descriptions and interpretations must be archived exactly as indicated by the original map author. This should be accomplished by embedding legacy information in a text field or other field dedicated to such a purpose.

The SLTT group is not mandated to make such a policy decision on behalf of its constituent agencies. However, we recognize that legacy geologic maps include a wide variety of earth-material terms, many of which have similar, if not identical, meanings. Our purpose was to review how such terms have been used historically, and to judge how useful they are for storage, manipulation, retrieval, and analysis in geologic-map databases. In most instances, we found that traditional earth-material nomenclature lends itself well to database applications. However, we found that some traditional names and classification schemes did not adapt themselves easily to database requirements. In such instances, we had to modify existing names slightly, abandon some terms, or propose new names. The result is a hierarchical classification of earth materials that accommodates two objectives:

  1. it allows legacy map terminology to be brought into modern geologic-map databases, using archival terminology where appropriate or by using generalized terminology where the specific original meaning is not clearly determinable;
  2. it allows future geologic mappers to archive information about earth materials in a manner that is consistent, uniform, flexible, and forward-looking.

2.4 Operational Approach

The question of “What’s in a name?” has plagued taxonomic classifications in all scientific arenas.

Historically, people have coined names for objects or concepts in order to convey information about them. The names are shorthand expressions (representations or proxies) for information packets that can be quite complex. Traditionally, the human brain has done the job of identifying all the attributes and components represented by a name. Now, we are asking computer databases to do this job.

The challenge to geologic classification and description in the database environment is:

The prototype SLTT classifications lean toward the second approach. Each hierarchical level in the proposed classifications is designed to contain names or terms that represent geologic concepts that are as narrowly defined as possible. In general, we tried to avoid names or terms that represent complex combinations of geologic information. Instead, we strived to break these combinations down into individual attributes (descriptors) that are not used as part of the lithologic name but instead are relegated to other database fields.

This approach does not deny that most high-level terms, by their very nature, already are compound and complex. However, for deeper-level geologic names we tried to minimize their compound nature.

2.5 Definition of Concepts

The SLTT documents use certain concepts and terms (e.g., classify, name, define, describe) that have common generic meanings. For our purposes, these terms need to be delineated without ambiguity. The following definitions guided our deliberations:

Characterize—“v.t. 1. to mark or distinguish as a characteristic; be a characteristic of....2. to describe the character or individual quality of....3. to attribute character to....” (Webster’s Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language, 2001, p. 347).

Controlled term—A term or name whose meaning and scope is restrained or restricted so that the term can be used or applied only according to the definition contained in a standard.

Classify—“v.t. 1. to arrange or organize by classes; order according to class. 2. to assign a classification to (information, a document, etc)” (Webster’s Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language, 2001, p. 381). To classify is to assign an instance to a specific group defined on the basis of a set of properties shared by members of the group. To classify answers the question “what kind of X is instance Y?”, where X represents the domain of the classification.

Define—“ v.t. 1. to state or set forth the meaning of....2. to explain or identify the nature or essential qualities of....3. to fix or lay down definitely; specify distinctly....4. to determine or fix the boundaries or extent of....5. to make clear the outline or form of....” (Webster’s Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language, 2001, p. 523).

Description—A set of statements that characterize the nature of a thing (a class or instance) such that the thing may be identified and named.

Earth material—A naturally occurring substance formed in or on the Earth by physical, chemical, or biogenic processes that produce solid particles or crystals of mineral and (or) rock.

Instance—“n. 1. a case or occurrence of anything....” (Webster’s Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language, 2001, p. 988).

Geologic-map unit—An intellectual construct that a geologist delineates on a map as a way to communicate a geologic concept to the map user. Each geologic-map unit corresponds to a three-dimensional volume of earth material that consists of one or more discrete lithotopes whose character and (or) frequency of occurrence makes each map unit distinct and unique from other such units. The map maker defines the scope, scale, boundaries, names, and reference sections for geologic-map units according to rules developed and adjudicated by the North American Commission on Stratigraphic Nomenclature (NACSN, 1983).

Lithotope—A body of sediment or rock that can be “a stratigraphic unit, a part of a stratigraphic section, a particular kind of sediment or rock, [or] a body of uniform sediments formed by the persistence of the depositional environment” (Glossary of Geology, Jackson, 1997, p. 373).

Modifier—A term or word that limits, constrains, or qualifies a controlled term.

Name—“n. 1. a word or a combination of words by which a person, place, or thing, a body or class, or any object of thought is designated, called, or known....” (Webster’s Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language, 2001, p. 1276). By this definition, a name is a proxy for the complete description that defines the nature of something (e.g., an “instance” of a geologic map unit). Ideally, every instance would have a unique name, but of course in the realm of earth materials, this is not always the case. That is why SLTT attempts to provide a standardized classification of names for earth materials, their physical attributes, and their genesis.

2.6 Guidelines followed by SLTT

In developing science language for earth materials, SLTT adopted the following rules:

2.6.1 Descriptive classification basis

To produce a classification system for earth materials that allows different observers to classify a given sample in the same way, the system must be based on physical properties of the rock recognizable by all observers. The properties used for field classification of earth materials include modal mineralogy, grain size, grain shape, rock fabric (the arrangement of grains in an aggregate to form the rock), and structures in the rock (bedding, layering, etc.). Although distinct bodies of rock may be recognized based on other physical properties (e.g., magnetic susceptibility, or density), these generally are not used as field criteria.

The approach to a lithologic classification developed here is fundamentally descriptive—that is, classification of an earth material is based on its observable features, and its assignment to a lithologic class implies that certain descriptive criteria are met. These descriptive criteria provide default attributes for each earth material, and no other attributes are required to satisfy the material definition. For example, the name for a sedimentary material (e.g., sandstone, calcareous dolostone, slightly gravelly sand) is a proxy for a default description embedded in the database simply through application of name to the material.

2.6.2 Science language compatible with geologic-mapping strategies

The goals and methods of geologic mapping require science-language structures that are different from those of other endeavors. This is because the types of observation that go into developing a geologic-map database do not have the same information content and scientific credibility at all locations within the map footprint. This conclusion is based on the nature of the geologic-mapping process.

For each geologic map, the scope, scale, and consistency of geologic observation varies throughout the map footprint. This is because the nature and quality of each observation varies from place to place, depending on its purpose, the time available to make it, and the quality of the geologic outcrop. Many observations upon which the map is based are detailed and comprehensive; others are generalized and cursory. The latter typically are not the fault of the geologic-map maker, but rather are intrinsic to the geologic-mapping process itself: every potential observation point within the map footprint cannot be examined with the same level of definitive care and quality, and the information content within a geologic-map unit must be extrapolated between observation points—some of which may be quite far apart.

The preceding examples suggest that a hierarchical observational approach characterizes the geologic-mapping process—ranging from generalized observations that are reconnaissance in scope to detailed observations that are definitive in scope. Each observational style has its own confidence level. Moreover, science-language terms for each observational level have slightly different meanings depending on the scale of observation. In each of the preceding examples, (1) does the term “sandstone” have the same meaning? (2) Are different types of information communicated through the use of “sandstone” in each circumstance? We answer “no” to the first question and “yes” to the second. This is a different process than takes place in the controlled environment of a petrology laboratory, where specific kinds of questions are pursued systematically and answered using language that is definitive and precise. Accordingly, we conclude that the science language of earth materials in geologic-map databases must be structured to reflect the hierarchical nature of observations made during the geologic-mapping process.

This is not to say that the observational quality of geologic-map information is poor—in specified places it is quite good. However, developers and users of science language for geologic maps need to be aware that (1) not all observations have the same level of refinement and (2) information projected (extrapolated) outward away from observation points without benefit of intervening data—the essence of geologic-map making—is vulnerable. These limitations require the science language of geologic-map data sets to be constructed so that the language reflects how geologic mapping actually is executed.

2.6.3 Progressive Hierarchical Structure

The classification language should be progressive: that is, it should be based on what the geologist can observe and describe sequentially during the course of making a geologic map—first with the un-aided eye, then with hand lens, and then with thin section. Each of these observation classes yields a package of information that differs in scope, content, and rigor from that in other classes. Lithologic names should be developed that are consistent with each observational class.

The progressive nature of the observation process yields a hierarchical language structure—that is, language that begins at a generalized level and progressively has more specific categories that communicate more refined information about each earth material. This hierarchical structure must rigidly follow the rules of parent-child lineages—that is, each child should occur only once in the hierarchy, and should have only one parent. This is important because compound parentage (where a geologic object can have more than one parent—i.e., can be interpreted as the result of more than one process) makes the classification process difficult and can lead to misleading hits during database queries and analysis.

Developing a logical hierarchical structure proved to be vexing. As with Linnean zoological taxonomy, the purpose of organizing earth-material names into parent-child lineages is to identify logical relationships among individual lithologic types and groups of lithologic types; taxonomic names presumably should reflect these relationships. In the case of geologic-map databases, the premise is that lumping and splitting real-world objects into inter-related categories will help in analyzing the objects, and will facilitate searching the geologic-map data set for items as narrowly or broadly defined as our interests require. We assume this premise is a valuable one, and that a hierarchical classification approach is not just a clerical device but has functional utility.

2.6.4 Clarity and Ease of Use

The data-producer and the data-user must understand clearly the basis for the earth-material classification schemes, and must be able to use them easily and comfortably. In some cases, proposed SLTT language structures require the map maker and map user to re-think or re-learn how to use some terms. However, in general, we predict that our language structures will be familiar to most users, and will provide a systematic and uniform way to describe and interpret earth materials.

2.6.5 Robust yet Flexible

As the SLTT group discussed the philosophy and rules of science language for geologic-map databases, we came to understand that such language needs to accommodate tensions that exist between two competing requirements: (1) the need to be rigorous and robust, and (2) the need to allow the geologic-map maker to uniquely describe and interpret earth materials that occur within the map area. This tension boils down to the battle between robustness and flexibility:

Table 2.6.5.1 Rules and procedures for building “local favorites list”
Local term
Local meaning
SLTT concept
SLTT concept
SLTT concept
black shale Fissile claystone containing abundant organic matter grain size
(specify clay:silt:sand ratio)
depositional fabric
(specify fissile fabric)
composition
(specify amount and type of organic content)
greenstone Lower-greenschist facies mafic to intermediate rock Metamorphic facies fabric
(specify fabric)
composition
(specify composition)
mangerite A charnockitic plutonic rock equivalent to an orthopyroxene-bearing monzonite modal mineralogy
(specify pyroxene modal percent)
family
(specify monzonite)
genesis
(specify plutonic igneous)

The only catch to this flexibility is that lithology terms in a “local favorites list” must be formally defined using science concepts and language laid out in the SLTT standard, and using data fields equivalent to those defined in the NADM data-model standard.

2.6.6 Compliance with North American Traditions

Earth-material names and parent-child relations among them must make sense according to common North American practice.

2.6.7 Rock Names versus Modifiers

Classification schema must distinguish clearly between defined earth-material names versus modifiers that add information to each name. Distinctions between names and modifiers should be incorporated into the architecture of the data fields and relational tables that support geologic-map databases, rather than into the rock names themselves.

2.7 Does genesis play a role in Earth-material classification?

In general, SLTT does not use genesis as a basis for classifying earth materials. Obviously, at the highest classification levels, earth-material names reflect their genesis (e.g., the distinction between igneous, metamorphic, and sedimentary materials fundamentally reflects genesis). Even deeper-level categories reflect a genetic factor (e.g., the distinction between terrigenous-clastic and carbonate sedimentary materials, or the distinction between volcanic and plutonic igneous materials). Obviously, the origin and geologic history of earth materials are important to many geologic-map users, and should be recorded in the geologic-map database in appropriate tables and data fields. However, genesis is so interpretive that its use in taxonomic classification at deeper levels should be avoided. Moreover, many map users are interested in the physical characteristics of earth materials, not their genesis. Hence, SLTT avoids the use of genetic factors in its classification schema.

3 SLTT RESULTS

Here we summarize the higher-level architecture of the SLTT science-language construct. These results and their detailed underpinnings will be released for peer review by the broad North American geologic-mapping community following final authorization by NADMSC.

3.1 Science language for earth materials

In parallel with the NADMSC Data Model Design Team (DMDT), SLTT defines the highest level in the classification hierarchy as “earth material”:

Earth material—A naturally occurring substance formed in or on the Earth by physical, chemical, or biogenic processes that produce solid particles or crystals of mineral and (or) rock3.

SLTT organizes earth materials into the following hierarchy:

Earth Material

Igneous earth material

Hypabyssal rock

Plutonic rock

Volcanic rock

Composite-genesis earth material

Metamorphic rock (traditional usage)

Cataclastic rock

Impact-metamorphic material

Sedimentary earth material

Unconsolidated sediment

Consolidated sedimentary rock

3.2 Igneous materials

The science language of igneous materials was addressed by two SLTT subgroups, one dealing with volcanic igneous materials and the other dealing with plutonic igneous materials. In one sense this subdivision is arbitrary, as the processes, compositions, and textures of the two igneous families overlap. However, the accumulation of volcanic materials at the Earth’s surface yields geologic products having unique geomorphic, compositional, and textural attributes; accordingly, SLTT developed science language for volcanic materials separately from plutonic materials.

3.2.1 Volcanic igneous materials

SLTT science language for volcanic earth materials is structured around four concepts:

Material name based on genesis

Intrusive

Effusive

Volcaniclastic

Material name based on texture

Unconsolidated

Consolidated

Fragmental volcanic rock

Non-fragmental volcanic rock

Material name based on modal composition

Felsic volcanic material

Mafic volcanic material

Ultramafic volcanic material

High-alkali volcanic material

Volcanic carbonatite material

Lamprophyre material

Fragmental volcanic rock

Non-fragmental volcanic rock

Form

Intrusive

Constructional

Deeper-level classification categories apportion material names recommended by the IUGS (IUGS, 1973; Streckeisen, 1974, 1976, 1978, 1979; Le Bas and others, 1986; Le Maitre and others, 1989; Le Bas and Streckeisen, 1991).

3.2.2 Plutonic igneous materials

SLTT science language for plutonic earth materials generally adopts the British Geological Survey (BGS) classification scheme for plutonic rocks (Gillespie and Styles, 1999) in accordance with material names recommended by the IUGS (IUGS, 1973; Streckeisen, 1974, 1976, 1978, 1979; Le Bas and others, 1986; Le Maitre and others, 1989; Le Bas and Streckeisen, 1991). However, the SLTT scheme differs slightly in order to accommodate North American traditions.

3.3 Composite-genesis rocks and rock particles

As defined in the SLTT classification, composite-genesis earth material is any earth material having observable features that document mineralogical, chemical, or structural change of a preexisting earth material essentially in the solid state. The category includes metamorphic rocks (sensu strictu), hydrothermally altered rocks, cataclastic rocks, and impact-metamorphic rocks. Weathered rock and pedogenic soil also could be considered composite-genesis materials, but SLTT has not included these materials in the development of the classification. Where possible, the British Geological Survey classification of metamorphic rocks (Robertson, 1999) and preliminary recommendations of the IUGS Subcommission on the Systematics of Metamorphic Rocks (SCMR) (Schmid and others, 2002) were adapted to meet SLTT database requirements.

Composite-genesis rocks are classified along two orthogonal dimensions, fabric and composition. Because both of these dimensions are hierarchical (Figures 1 and 2), the class hierarchy for composite-genesis rocks is a directed acyclic graph rather than a tree. Classes that have both composition and fabric criteria are ‘children’ of both a ‘composition’ parent and a ‘fabric’ lithology parent. Actual class names for rocks have a fabric component (such as schist) and a compositional component (such as marble or quartzofeldspathic).

Simplified hierarchy of fabric-based composite-origin rock names. For a more detailed explanation, contact John Matti at jmatti@strider.swfo.arizona.edu.  

Figure 1. Simplified hierarchy of fabric-based composite-origin rock names.

 


Simplified hierarchy of composition-based composite-origin rock name terms. For a more detailed explanation, contact John Matti at jmatti@strider.swfo.arizona.edu.   Figure 2. Simplified hierarchy of composition-based composite-origin rock name terms.

Metamorphic rock (traditional sense)—A metamorphic rock has observable features that document change after the original formation of the rock, under physical or chemical conditions that differ from those normally occurring at the surface of the Earth and in zones of cementation and diagenesis below the surface (Smulikowski and others, 1997). The basic level of classification is the definition of fabric-based types described as hornfels, granofels, schist, layered gneiss, non-layered gneiss, slate, and mylonite-series rock (Table 3.3.1). In this classification, hydrothermally altered rocks are treated as metamorphic rocks; the full metamorphic classification is applied to these rocks without treating them as a distinct, separate category.

Table 3.3.1 Fabric-based metamorphic-rock classes
Fabric-based
Metamorphic-rock Class
Definition and scope notes
Hornfels
A non-foliated aphanitic metamorphic rock having granoblastic fabric. The term does not necessarily denote a contact metamorphic origin, although that is most commonly the case
Granofels
A phaneritic metamorphic rock that has little or no foliation or lineation, implying that that less than 10% of the particles in the rock are fabric elements that have an inequant shape and an aspect ratio ≥ 1.5:1
Schist
a phaneritic metamorphic rock that has well developed continuous schistosity. “Well developed” schistosity is defined here to mean that >50% of the rock consists of mineral grains having a tabular, lamellar, or prismatic crystallographic habit that are oriented in a continuous planar or linear fabric (Jackson, 1997). Continuous is defined to mean that domains lacking the fabric are <1 cm thick if they are layers, and <5 cm in diameter if they are irregular patches, and constitute <25% of the rock. Phyllite is a fine-grained subclass of schist having an average grain size between 0.25 mm and 0.1 mm and a silvery sheen.
Layered gneiss
a foliated, phaneritic rock that lacks well developed, continuous schistosity and has laterally continuous compositional layering > 5 mm thick
Non-layered gneiss
a foliated, phaneritic rock that lacks both well developed, continuous schistosity and laterally continuous compositional layering > 5 mm thick. “Laterally continuous” here means that layers defining the foliation can be traced > 10 cm (length of lateral continuity)
Slate
an aphanitic rock that has well developed schistosity (Brodie and others, 2002). The definition of schistosity used in this classification requires that >50% of the rock consists of mineral grains having a tabular, lamellar, or prismatic crystallographic habit that are oriented in a continuous planar or linear fabric. In an aphanitic rock this determination is generally based on indirect evidence, which is typically the presence of slaty cleavage, and the sheen observed on parting surfaces due to alignment of tiny phyllosilicate grains. An average grain size that is aphanitic (<0.1 mm), except for porphyroblasts, is specified for precision.
Mylonite-series rock
displays a foliation defined by the shapes of deformed mineral grains or grain aggregates having aspect ratios > 1.5:1, >10% of the rock is composed of “matrix” showing evidence of tectonic reduction in grain size, and the foliation and matrix have observable features that document continuous, crystal-plastic deformation. Mylonite-series rock is subdivided according to matrix percentages into protomylonite, mylonite, and ultramylonite (Sibson, 1977)

Composition-based rock classes include amphibolite, marble, and common monomineralic rocks such as quartzite and serpentinite, which are defined individually by modal mineral composition. Other monomineralic metamorphic rocks consisting predominantly (>75%) of a single mineral are classified as monomineralic-granofels, monomineralic-hornfels, monomineralic-schist, etc., depending on the fabric. Composition qualifiers defined on the basis of modal mineralogy (ferromagnesian, calcsilicate, carbonate, pelitic, semipelitic, quartzofeldspathic; see Table 3.3.2) are combined with a fabric term as in “pelitic schist.” Traditional non-systematic rock terms such as amphibolite that are based on modal mineralogy are also treated as composition qualifier terms. This classification leans towards a minimum of special rock names for unusual composition rocks, and such rocks would be assigned a “special composition’ qualifier. The uncontrolled rock-name field in the database is available to assign any special rock name the geologist may prefer.

Table 3.3.2 Selected composition-based classes (qualifiers)
Composition qualifiers
Definition
amphibolite
Rock consists of >75% green, brown, or black amphibole plus plagioclase (including albite) and amphibole >30% (modal) of whole rock, and amphibole >50% of total mafic constituents
argillic
Rock is apparently clay-rich. Use for aphanitic rocks
calcareous
Rock reacts to form bubbles when hydrochloric acid is applied. Use for aphanitic rocks (e.g. hornfels)
calcsilicate
Rock consists of ≥ 50% calcsilicate or carbonate minerals and carbonate minerals ≤ calcsilicate minerals in mineral mode
ferromagnesian
Rock consists of >40% dark ferromagnesian minerals. Standard term defined by Bates and Jackson (1987) to mean “containing iron and magnesium”
impure marble
Rock consists of >50% calcsilicate or carbonate minerals and relative proportion of calcsilicate and carbonate minerals is unknown or not specified
mafic
Rock consists of ≥ 40% and <90% ferromagnesian minerals
marble
Rock consists of > 75% carbonate minerals
metacarbonate
Rock consists of >50% calcsilicate or carbonate minerals and carbonate minerals > calcsilicate minerals in mineral mode
monomineralic
Rock consists of >75% of a single mineral species and does not meet any of the other composition terms (e.g. quartzite, calcite marble, dolomite marble, serpentinite…)
pelitic
Rock for which the sum of modal quartz+feldspar+ mica + aluminous mineral is ≥ 70%, and aluminous mineral + mica content is ≥ 40%
quartzite
Rock consists of ≥ 75% quartz
quartzofeldspathic
Rock for which the sum of modal quartz+feldspar+ mica + aluminous mineral is ≥70%, and quartz + feldspar (sensu Robertson, 1999) >60%
semipelitic
Rock for which the sum of modal quartz+feldspar+ mica + aluminous mineral is ≥70%, and quartz+ feldspar < 60%
silicic
Rock is apparently silica-rich. Use for aphanitic rocks. Bates & Jackson (1987) include denotation of igneous origin. For this classification, should be considered to mean “appears to consist largely of quartz and feldspar”, generally is aphanitic with hardness >= 6.
special composition
Rock has a mineral composition that doesn’t fit in any defined composition class. A modal mineral description is essential. The rock consists of <40% ferromagnesian minerals and <50% carbonate + calcsilicate minerals and <70% Q+Fs + mica + aluminous minerals
ultramafic
Rock consists of >90% ferromagnesian minerals

The SLTT classification of metamorphic rocks does not apply the ‘meta’ prefix to a protolith name (as in metasiltstone), because it cannot be simply integrated into a classification based on fabric and composition, and because interpretations of protolith can be highly subjective. Rock name terms in the form “meta-(some rock name)’ can be placed by the user in an uncontrolled rock name field and can also appear in a user interface by having underlying software that maps the name assignment to the implied dual classification. Where the protolith can be determined, the classification includes two distinct parts—a protolith classification using the criteria applicable to the protolith lithology, and a composite-genesis classification based on the fabric and composition criteria outlined here. The data model design should include a mechanism that allows the “dominant’ aspect of a rock that has multiple classifications to be specified.

Cataclastic rock—SLTT classifies a rock as cataclastic if >10% of the volume consists of fragments bounded by fractures. Cataclastic rocks are further classified based on the presence or absence of primary cohesion, the percentage of broken fragments large enough to be visible, and the amount of fragmental cataclastic matrix (Sibson, 1977; Snoke and Tullis, 1998) Cataclastic rock having evidence of primary cohesion is subdivided according to matrix percentages into protocataclasite, cataclasite, and ultracataclasite (Sibson, 1977). Cataclastic rock that lacks primary cohesion is subdivided into fault breccia (visible fragments>30% of rock) and gouge (visible fragments <30%).

Impact-metamorphic rock—Impact-metamorphic rocks have observable features, such as microscopic planar deformation features, that are unequivocally the result of shock metamorphism (Stöffler and Grieve, 2001), high-pressure minerals, or field evidence such as shatter cones and crater structure. Adapting Stöffler and Grieve’s (2001) IUGS recommendations with slight modifications, impact-metamorphic rock is classified as shocked rock, impact melt rock, or impact breccia.

3.4 Sedimentary materials

The SLTT Sedimentary Subgroup developed science language for the lithologic classification (material name), physical characteristics, and origin and depositional history of sedimentary materials.

3.4.1 Classification

At the top hierarchical level, sedimentary earth materials are classified into eight categories based on sediment composition (Table 3.4.1.1). At a high level, unconsolidated sediment is distinguished from consolidated rock, and separate (but parallel) naming schemes are developed for each consolidation state.

Table 3.4.1.1 Higher taxonomic levels of sedimentary-material classification
Sedimentary Material
(unconsolidated, consolidated)
Definition
Sedimentary material, unclassified
Not enough information is known about a sedimentary material to classify it as anything other than sedimentary rock or sediment
Terrigenous-clastic sedimentary material
A rock or sediment composed principally of broken fragments that are derived from the land or continent. To be considered as terrigenous-clastic, a rock (sediment) must have ≥ 50% of its constituents derived from the land or continent
Carbonate sedimentary material
Sediment or sedimentary rock ≥50% of whose primary and (or) re-crystallized constituents are composed of carbonate minerals (calcite, aragonite, dolomite). By definition, such materials are intra-basinal in origin—that is, they formed by processes operating within the depositional regime, and were not transported into that regime from other sediment sources
Organic-rich sedimentary material
Sedimentary materials having sufficiently high organic content that they can not be identified as another kind of sedimentary rock (e.g., terrigenous-clastic or carbonate). Pragmatically, SLTTS_1.0 places this threshold at ≥50% organic content by weight to be consistent with the established definition for coal without conflicting with definitions of other compositionally-based categories
Non-clastic siliceous sedimentary material
Sedimentary materials dominated by non-clastic silica are those composed of ≥50% silica of biogenic or chemical origin (Hallsworth and Knox, 1999, p. 21)
Noncarbonate-salt sedimentary material
Sedimentary materials dominated by non-carbonate salts are those whose primary constituents consist of chloride, sulphate, or borate minerals. Such materials also are known as evaporite materials because they form through evaporative precipitation of mineral salts from brines—either directly from the water column or from pore fluids during diagenesis
Phosphate-rich sedimentary material
Phosphatic sedimentary materials are those in which phosphate minerals or phosphatic component comprise >50% of the sedimentary framework as determined by hand-lens or petrographic analysis (Hallsworth and Knox, 1999). This corresponds with a rock (sediment) typically containing ≥15% P2O5 (by weight)
Iron-rich sedimentary material
Iron-rich sedimentary materials are those in which iron-bearing minerals comprise ≥50% of the sedimetary framework as determined by hand-lens or petrographic analysis (Hallsworth and Knox, 1999). This corresponds with a rock (sediment) typically containing ≥15% iron (by weight)

Within each compositional category, lower-level (more detailed) material names are based on textural or compositional criteria (or both), depending on the parent category.

3.4.2 Unconsolidated versus consolidated sedimentary materials

The distinction between “unconsolidated” and “consolidated” (sediment versus rock) occupied considerable SLTT discussion and attention. We concluded that SLTT can suggest guidelines for distinguishing unconsolidated from consolidated materials. However, ultimately it will be the subjective decision of the data producer as to whether a specific sedimentary material is “consolidated” or “unconsolidated” according to his or her judgment. Table 3.4.2.1 provides guidelines that can facilitate this determination.

Table 3.4.2.1 Degrees of consolidation (modified from Bowles, 1984, Table 5-2)
 
Lithification State
Field Criterion
Relative
Density (Dr)4
Unconsolidated Very slightly consolidated Easily indented with fingers 0.00–0.20
  Slightly consolidated Somewhat less easily indented with fingers.
Easily shoveled
0.20–0.40
  Moderately consolidated Shoveled with difficulty 0.40–0.70
Consolidated Well consolidated Requires pick to loosen for shoveling 0.70–0.90
  Lithified Requires blasting or heavy equipment to loosen 0.90–1.00
  Indurated Rings to the blow of a hammer 1.00
4As translated by Bowles (1984, p. 151–152), relative density is an engineering parameter that relates void space determined in the laboratory to a ratio involving index values of minimum and maximum void space for specified materials under specified conditions. Void space in turn is related to in situ dry unit weight. Also see the Glossary of Geology definition of relative density (Jackson, 1997, p. 540).

3.4.3 Outcrop characteristics of sedimentary materials

SLTT developed science language for a variety of attributes that characterize the outcrop appearance of sedimentary materials (Table 3.4.3.1):

Table 3.4.3.1 Outcrop characteristics of sedimentary materials
Science Concept
Data-Field Content
Lithotope abundance
Indicates the relative abundance of each lithotope in an outcrop
Map-unit geomorphology
Describes how a map unit crops out (prominent, subdued)
Outcrop profile
Describes how individual lithotopes crop out (ledge-forming, slope-forming, etc.)
Outcrop weathering
Describes how sedimentary materials weather (cavernous, friable, etc.)
Upper-surface geomorphology
Describes various features associated with the upper surface of unconsolidated materials (dissection, pavement, pedogenic soils, clast weathering, etc.)
Material color (fresh)
Describes the color of fresh geologic materials
Material color (weathered)
Describes the color of weathered geologic materials
Material color (dry)
Describes the color of dry geologic materials
Material color (wet)
Describes the color of wet geologic materials
Consolidation state
Describes how firm and knitted together a sedimentary material is, and how hard it is once it has been lithified

3.4.4 Sedimentary structures

The SLTT classifies sedimentary structures into primary and secondary structures:

Primary sedimentary structure—A sedimentary structure, either inorganic or organic, formed during the accumulation and (or) penecontemporaneous modification of sediment, intrinsically reflecting conditions of the sedimentary environment.

A primary structure reflects one of the following processes:

  1. transportation and deposition of sediment (i.e., mechanical process);
  2. penecontemporaneous modification of sediment by physical and biogenic processes shortly after its accumulation (e.g., downslope slumping, bioturbation, burrowing);

Secondary sedimentary structure—A sedimentary structure “...that originated subsequently to the deposition...of the rock in which it is found...; esp. an epigenetic sedimentary structure, such as a concretion or nodule produced by chemical action, or a sedimentary dike formed by infilling” Glossary of Geology (Jackson, 1997, p. 576).

Not included as secondary sedimentary structures are:

  1. structures representing from tectonic deformation (e.g., faults, fractures)
  2. structures formed as the result of subaerial exposure, weathering, and dissolution not related to the sedimentary life cycle of a map unit (e.g., karsts, pedogenic soils).

The essential ingredient of secondary sedimentary structures is that they have no intrinsic relation with conditions of the sedimentary environment. This distinguishes secondary structures from primary structures.

Table 3.4.4.1 summarizes major categories of sedimentary structures.

Table 3.4.4.1 Classification of sedimentary structures

Primary Structures

Inorganic structures

Syngenetic structures

Depositional structures

Erosional structures

Penecontemporaneous structures

Bed-surface structures

Within-bed structures

Multi-bed structures

Biogenic Structures

Secondary Structures

Secondary deformation structures

Sedimentary hardground

Dissolution structures

Epigenetic growth structures

Unclassified Structures

Bed-surface structures

Within-bed structures

Multi-bed structures

3.4.5 Fabric and texture of sedimentary materials

SLTT developed science language for a variety of attributes that characterize the fabric and texture of sedimentary materials (Table 3.4.5.1).

Table 3.4.5.1 Fabric and texture elements for sedimentary materials
Science Concept
Data-Field Content
Preservation of depositional fabric
Yes or no
Grain-support versus matrix support
Indicates whether fabric is clast-supported or matrix-supported
Particle size, matrix grain size (range)
Indicates range of matrix grain size
Particle size, matrix grain size (average)
Indicates mean of matrix grain size
Particle size, particle grain size (range)
Indicates range of particle grain size
Particle size, particle grain size (average)
Indicates mean of particle grain size
Particle sorting
Indicates sorting in terms of Inclusive Graphic Standard Deviation (Folk, 1968)
Particle shape and rounding
Indicates the shape of grains and clasts (rounded, subangular, tabular, spherical, etc.)
Coated particles
Indicates the fabric type created by particle coating (ooidal, pisoidal, oncoidal)
Particle orientation
Indicates the geometric orientation of elongate or disk-shaped particles
Particle packing
Indicates the spacing or density patterns of particles as expressed by nature of grain contacts

3.4.6 Sedimentary genesis

SLTT classifies sedimentary genesis according to a scheme that integrates three attributes:

Ultimately, it is the interaction between depositional process and depositional environment that yields a depositional product. This interaction can be viewed as a two-dimensional matrix in which process is arrayed against place (Table 3.4.6.1).

Table 3.4.6.1 Two-dimensional matrix that arrays depositional process (left) against depositional environment (right) to yield cells in which a depositional product may or may not occur (for examples, see Table 3.1.4). NOTE: Table 3.4.6.1 depicts only the highest-level categories for process and environment; the matrix can be expanded to expose deeper and deeper categories. Also Note: Not all combinations of process and environment are possible (hence, no depositional product exists).
 
ENVIRONMENTS
(major environments only)
Terrestrial
Marginal
marine
Marine
PROCESSES
(major processes only)
Inorganic Processes
Chemogenic Processes
Evaporative precipitation
     
Seafloor precipitation      
Fluid-Flow Aqueous-flow current flow      
fluvial flow      
overland-flow      
wave action      
Eolian-flow dune- and sand-sheet processes      
Gravitational
Potential
Energy
Mass-wasting subaerial      
subaqueous      
Particle Settling object plummeting      
suspension deposition      
Impact-ejecta accumulation      
Solid-flow Ice-flow        
Biogenic Processes
Sediment-production biogenic oozes        
Framework-building framework-built reefs        
Sediment-binding organic mats        
Sediment-trapping organic-baffles and reef mounds        

In Table 3.4.6.1, the intersection of a genetic process with a sedimentary environment yields a grid cell that represents a potential depositional product. Table 3.4.6.2 lists representative examples (but not all examples) of such products.

Table 3.4.6.2 Representative examples of deposit types that represent the intersection of depositional process and depositional environment (see Table 3.4.6.1)
algal-mat deposit
bog deposit
bar deposit
beach deposit
braided-channel deposit
channel deposit
chute-channel deposit
crevasse-channel deposit
crevasse-splay deposit
debris-flow deposit
distributary-mouth bar deposit
dune deposit
fan deposit (subaerial)
fan deposit (subaqueous)
fan-delta deposit
flood-plain deposit
glacial-till deposit
inlet channel fan deposit
lagoon deposit
levee deposit (subaerial)
levee deposit (subaqueous)
marsh deposit
meandering-channel deposit
mud-flat deposit
overbank-fines deposit
pelagic-ooze deposit
pond deposit
reef, framework-built
reef, sediment-trapping
sabkha deposit
sand-flat deposit
sand-flat deposit
sheet-flow deposit
sheet-sand deposit
shelf deposit
slide deposit
slope deposit
slump deposit
supratidal-flat deposit
swamp deposit
tidal-channel deposit
tidal-flat deposit
tidal-inlet deposit
tidal-ridge deposit
turbidite deposit
washover-fan deposit

All three genetic attributes (depositional process, depositional environment, depositional product) can be classified hierarchically to yield a complete description of how a sedimentary material was formed.

4 PEDOGENIC MATERIAL

SLTT has not yet found a satisfactory basis for classifying pedogenic-soil materials. A pedogenic soil is a parent material that has developed soil structure, texture, and mineralogy (horizonation) through a variety of physical, chemical, and biologic agents. Horizon development in the parent materials thus is a secondary process, not a primary process that leads to a first-generation earth material. Even though pedogenic processes take place at temperatures, pressures, and physical-chemical environments at the Earth’s surface, soil-forming processes are akin to “metamorphism” in the sense that an original earth material (parent material) is transformed into another earth material (pedogenic soil). Thus, pedogenic material could be included within the composite-genesis category. However, some SLTT members argue that pedogenic soil properly belongs within the sedimentary category, while others maintain that pedogenic soil is a high-level taxonomic category comparable to igneous, sedimentary, and composite-genesis materials. SLTT hopes to resolve these conflicting interpretations by the time the science-language documents are released for widespread North American peer review.

5 CONCLUSIONS

The use of standardized science language in digital geologic-map databases is a new frontier that is likely to evolve with time and experience. With this in mind, we are developing a classification of earth materials that we believe reflects not only how mapping geologists view them but also how such materials might be queried and analyzed in digital geologic-map databases. No single classification of earth materials is going to please all workers. However, the schemes we propose hopefully will be clearly understandable, internally consistent, and usable by both data-producer and data-user.

6 REFERENCES CITED

Bowles, J.E., 1984, Physical and geotechnical properties of soils: New York, McGraw-Hill Book Company, 2nd Edition, 578 p.

Brodie, K., Fettes, D., Harte, B., and Schmid, R., 2002, Towards a unified nomenclature of metamorphic petrology: 5. Structural terms including fault rock terms, A proposal on behalf of the IUGS Subcommission on the Systematics of Metamorphic Rocks, Web version of 31.10.2002: 8 p., available online at http://www.bgs.ac.uk/SCMR

Dreimanis, A., 1988, Tills: their genetic terminology and classification, in Goldthwait, R.P., and Matsch, C.L., eds., Genetic classification of glacigenic deposits (Final report of the Commission on Genesis and Lithology of Glacial Quaternary Deposits of the International Union for Quaternary Research [INQUA]): Rotterdam, A.A. Balkema, p. 17-83.

Foley, S.F., Venturelli, G., Green, D.H., and Toscanni, L., 1987, The ultra potassic rocks: characteristics, classification and constraints for petrographic models: Earth Science Reviews, v. 24, p. 81–134.

Folk, R.L., 1968, Petrology of sedimentary rocks: Austin, Texas, Hemphill’s Bookstore, 170 p.

Gillespie, M.R., and Styles, M.T., 1999, Classification of igneous rocks: Volume 1 of the BGS rock classification scheme: British Geological Survey Research Report Number RR 99-06, 52 p.

Goldthwait, R.P., and Matsch, C.L., eds., 1988, Genetic classification of glacigenic deposits (Final report of the Commission on Genesis and Lithology of Glacial Quaternary Deposits of the International Union for Quaternary Research [INQUA]): Rotterdam, A.A. Balkema, 294 p.

Goldthwait, R.P., Matsch, and Dreimanis, A., 1988, Preface, in Goldthwait, R.P., and Matsch, C.L., eds., Genetic classification of glacigenic deposits (Final report of the Commission on Genesis and Lithology of Glacial Quaternary Deposits of the International Union for Quaternary Research [INQUA]): Rotterdam, A.A. Balkema, p. vii-ix.

Hallsworth, C.R., and Knox, R.W.O’B., 1999, Classification of sediments and sedimentary rocks: Volume 3 of the BGS rock classification scheme: British Geological Survey Research Report Number RR 99-03, 44 p.

Heiken, G., and Wohletz, K.H., 1985, Volcanic ash: Berkeley, University of California Press. International Union of Geological Sciences Subcommission on the Systematics of Igneous Rocks, 1973, Plutonic rocks: Geotimes, v. 18, no. 10, p. 26-30.

Jackson, J.A., 1997, Glossary of geology, 4th ed.: Alexandria, Virginia, American Geological Institute, 769 p. Le Bas, M.J., and Streckeisen, A., 1991, The IUGS systematics of igneous rocks: Journal of the Geological Society of London, v. 148, p. 825–833.

Le Bas, M.J., Le Maitre, R.W., Streckeisen, A., and Zanettin, B., 1986, A chemical classification of volcanic rocks based on the total alkali-silica diagram: Journal of Petrology, v. 27, p. 745–750.

Le Maitre, R.W., and 11 others (editors), 1989, A classification of igneous rocks and glossary of terms: Recommendations of the International Union of Geological Sciences Subcommission on the Systematics of Igneous Rocks: Oxford, Blackwell Scientific Publications.

Le Maitre, R.W. (editor), 2002, Igneous rocks, A classification and glossary of terms, second edition: Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2nd edition 236 p.

MacDonald, R., 1974, Nomenclature and petrochemistry of the peralkaline oversaturated extrusive rocks: Bulletin Volcanologique, v. 38, p. 498–516.

McMillan, A.A., and Powell, J.H., 1999, Classification of artificial (man-made) ground and natural superficial deposits: applications to geological maps and datasets in the UK: v. 4 of the BGS rock classification scheme: British Geological Survey Research Report Number RR 99-04, 65 p.

North American Commission on Stratigraphic Nomenclature, 1983, North American stratigraphic code: American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin, v. 67, no. 5, p. 841-875.

North American Data Model Steering Committee, 2003, Proposed North American standard conceptual model for geologic map information, version 1.0: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 04-XXX (http://)

Robertson, S., 1999, Classification of metamorphic rocks: Volume 2 of the BGS rock classification scheme: British Geological Survey Research Report Number RR 99-02, 24 p.

Schmid, R., 1981, Descriptive nomenclature and classification of pyroclastic deposits and fragments: Recommendations of the IUGS Subcommission on the Systematics of Igneous Rocks: Geology, v. 9, p. 41–43.

Schmid, R., Fettes, D., Harte, B., Davis, E., Desmons, J., and Siivola, J., 2002, Towards a unified nomenclature in metamorphic petrology: 1. How to name a metamorphic rock, A proposal on behalf of the IUGS Subcommission on the Systematics of Metamorphic Rocks, Web version of 31.07.2002: 13 p., available online at http://www.bgs.ac.uk/SCMR

Sibson, R.H., 1977, Fault rocks and fault mechanisms: Journal of the Geological Society of London, v. 133, p. 191-213.

Smulikowski, W., Desmons, J., Harte, B., Sassi, F.P., and Schmid, R., 1997, Towards a unified nomenclature of metamorphism: 3. Types, grade and facies [A proposal on behalf of the IUGS Subcommission on the Systematics of Metamorphic Rocks], compiled 1 September 1997 and corrected 19 November 1997: 13 p., available online at http://www.bgs.ac.uk/SCMR.

Snoke, A.W., and Tullis, J., 1998, An overview of fault rocks, in Snoke, A.W., Tullis, J., and Todd, V.R., Fault-related Rocks, A Photographic Atlas: Princeton, N.J., Princeton University Press, p. 3-18.

Stöffler, D., and Grieve, R.A.F., 2001, IUGS classification and nomenclature of impact metamorphic rocks: Towards a final proposal [indexed as: Towards a unified nomenclature of metamorphism: IUGS classification and nomenclature of impact metamorphic rocks. A proposal on behalf of the IUGS Subcommission on the Systematics of Metamorphic Rocks, Web version of 14.01.2001]: 3 p., available online at http://www.bgs.ac.uk/SCMR.

Streckeisen, A. 1974, Classification and nomenclature of plutonic rocks: Recommendations of the IUGS Subcommission on the Systematics of Igneous Rocks: Geologische Rundschau Internationale Zeitschrift für Geologie: Stuttgart, v. 63, p. 773–785.

Streckeisen, A. 1976, To each plutonic rock its proper name: Earth Science Reviews, v. 12, p. 1–33.

Streckeisen, A. 1978, IUGS Subcommission on the Systematics of Igneous Rocks: Classification and nomenclature of volcanic rocks, lamprophyres, carbonatites and melilitic rocks. Recommendations and suggestions: Neues Jahrbuch für Mineralogie, v. 134, p. 1–14.

Streckeisen, A. 1979, Classification and nomenclature of volcanic rocks, lamprophyres, carbonatites and melilitic rocks: recommendations and suggestions of the IUGS Subcommission on the Systematics of Igneous Rocks: Geology, v. 7, p. 331–335.

Webster’s Encyclopedic Unabridged Dictionary of the English Language, 2001: San Diego, Thunder Bay Press, 2230 p.

APPENDIX 1

PROPOSED NORTH AMERICAN GEOLOGIC-MAP DATA MODEL
SCIENCE-LANGUAGE TECHNICAL TEAM CHARTER
11/1/99

Executive Statement.—See the Data Model Steering Committee (DMSC) charter for an executive statement on technical teams.

MANDATE AND CHARGE

Mandate.—The Science Language Technical Team (SLTT) is mandated to develop standardized nomenclature for digital geologic-map databases—including (but not limited to) the following areas:

The standardized terminology will support a proposed standard geologic-map data model for North America.

Charge.—To achieve its mandate, the Science Language Technical Team is charged with the following tasks:

  1. To determine the scope and comprehensiveness appropriate to a continent-wide terminology for geologic map databases. Terminology scope should reflect several realities, including (1) the intended use of the geologic-map terminology, (2) the geologic scale to which the terminology will be applied, (3) the prerogatives of historic usage by various geologic-mapping constituencies, and (4) the degree to which geologic terminology is amenable to a single hierarchical classification structure. These factors (and others developed by the SLTT) should determine the degree and level of standardization appropriate for continent-wide geoscience language.
  2. To develop one or more strawman classifications for geologic-map science language that will be made available for widespread peer review.
  3. To prepare and publish documents describing the basis for the science-language terminology, and presenting the classification scheme(s) and their technical and non-technical definitions.

Authority.—The SLTT derives its authority and legitimacy from the DMSC, which provides guidance and requirements on behalf of the constituencies it represents.

Accountability.—The SLTT is accountable to the DMSC. Through a representative mutually acceptable to the SLTT and DMSC, the SLTT periodically apprises the Steering Committee of progress toward science language terminology and about issues and problems that need consideration by the DMSC.

TECHNICAL-TEAM OPERATIONS

Execution of work.—The SLTT will convene an initial meeting to evaluate goals and to discuss issues, problems, and terminology strategies. The Technical Team should have as many face-to-face meetings as required to allocate responsibilities and to resolve issues and problems not easily resolvable via e-mail.

Lateral Coordination.—The SLTT will regularly communicate strategies and proposed terminologies laterally to other Technical Teams—especially the Data-Model Design Technical Team—in order to ensure that data-model architecture and software tools consistently reflect the evolving science language and concepts.

Technical Review.—Science-language documents prepared by the SLTT will be presented to the DMSC for initial review and evaluation for compliance with the overall goals of the North American geologic-map data model. Following DMSC review and SLTT response, the science-language documents will be widely distributed for technical peer review by the geosciences community (probably through a web-based venue).

TECHNICAL-TEAM MEMBERSHIP

Work Group Size.—The size of the SLT should be commensurate with its mandate: If geologic and political realities require that the scope and content of data-model science language be generalized and narrow, then the size of the Technical Team should be small; however, if the scope and content of data model science language is to be comprehensive and detailed, then the size of the Technical Team should be large enough to ensure scientific comprehensiveness and consensus of the larger geologic community.

Scientific Breadth.—SLTT membership should span the range of surficial and bedrock geologic disciplines, including expertise in sedimentary, igneous, metamorphic, structural, stratigraphic, and geomorphic/pedogenic arenas. Experts on specific scientific disciplines can be added for short durations to address specific geologic issues that arise during SLTT deliberations.

Geographic Breadth.—SLTT membership should include a broad range of geographic representation so as to reflect provincial geologic usages.

Constituency Breadth.—SLTT membership should represent the constituencies that will contribute to geologic map databases—initially including the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), the Association of American State Geologists (AASG), the Geological Survey of Canada (GSC), and the Canadian Provincial Surveys. Inclusion of industry and academic participants will depend on the narrowness or breadth of the science-language standards.

Appointment procedure.—SLTT members shall be appointed by the DMSC based on the recommendations of each constituency and considering the criteria defined in Scientific, Geographic, and Constituency Breadth:

Lifespan of Technical Team.—Continued existence of the SLTT as a standing committee responding to data-model science–language needs shall be at the discretion of the DMSC. The SLTT will remain intact during the review period, and shall respond to Steering Committee review and to peer review until such time as version 1.0 of the science-language classification is adopted for use in the draft standard data model.

MILESTONES

Within a year of convening its first session, the SLTT shall carry out its charge to produce one or more science-language strawman classifications. The SLTT receives guidance on milestones from the DMSC, evaluates their feasibility, and reaches targets in conjunction with DMSC.

APPENDIX 2

Memoranda from SLTT Chair (J.C. Matti) to SLTT committee members

Memorandum from SLTT Chair to SLTT committee members (4/03/2000)

Participants on the Science Language Technical Team For a Proposed North American Geologic-Map Data Model            
04/03/2000

Science Language Technical Team colleagues:

By now, each of you hopefully is aware that you have been selected as a participant on a technical team (Science Language Technical Team, SLTT) tasked with coming to groups with how (or whether) a common set of geoscience terms can be developed for digital geologic-map data bases produced in North America. The SLTT is one of several parallel teams commissioned on behalf of a proposed North American Geologic-Map Data Model.

Background

A standardized data-base model for the input, storage, manipulation, retrieval, and analysis of digital geologic-map information is being developed by a consortium of interests, including the Association of American State Geologists (AASG), the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), the Geological Survey of Canada (GSC), and the Canadian Provincial Surveys. The data model currently being evaluated was developed as a cooperative venture by the USGS, the GSC, and the AASG.

This model attained visibility through a series of workshops and through presentations at national GSA meetings. It developed as a likely candidate for a North American data-model standard, and over a period of time was revised and refined under the aegis of the AASG, the USGS, and the GSC. The data model can be found on the World Wide Web at http://geology.usgs.gov/dm/model/Model43a.pdf (version 4.3, Johnson and others, 1999). Continued development of a data-model standard is proceeding under the auspices of a multi-constituency North American Data Model Steering Committee (NADMSC, http://geology.usgs.gov/dm/steering/), which has commissioned the technical teams that are developing various aspects of the data model.

How did you come to be a participant in this process?

Scientists from the American state geological surveys were identified by the Association of American State Geologists. Participants from the USGS were nominated through a process that was coordinated through the three Regional Geologists and through the Geologic Division Program Coordinators. The two Canadian participants represent the Provincial surveys and the Geological Survey of Canada; hopefully, additional Canadian participants will be identified in the near future. I am in the process of recruiting a few representatives from the geologic-map using community within the U.S. Departments of Interior and Agriculture, one of whom has been identified. All of you are viewed as ideal for responding to the task before us.

Where is the SLTT process now, and what is next?

It has taken a while to establish the SLTT membership because it has not been easy to coordinate among multiple constituencies. But, we are about there, so I thought I would bring you up to speed, and address some mechanical issues.

  1. I want to start business on April the 17th.
  2. We have a year from that date to execute our responsibilities.
  3. I imagine a month of your time will be required throughout the 12-month cycle, but time invested will depend on interest level and commitment to the SLTT process.
  4. As a Team, we will work together to develop interim milestones.
  5. We will regularly keep the Data Model Steering Committee appraised of our progress.
  6. Our initial dialogue will be electronic, in the form of email and a web-conference site devoted to science-language issues (http://geology.usgs.gov/dm/terms/).
  7. Please access the web-conference site and register. The site was constructed and is maintained by Peter Schweitzer of the USGS, who assures me that it will work as advertised (all who register at the site are supposed to be notified by email when a new contribution is made, but if anything can go wrong, it must go wrong!).
  8. My role is that of a facilitator. My job is to stimulate your creativity and your analytical approach to our task. If I am not doing that, I am failing and you must so inform me.
  9. Attached to this mail are several .pdf files, one being an archival copy of this email. My hunch is that .pdf exchange will be a common tool for the SLTT’s business, so if you do not have a .pdf reader or if somehow my files are not readable by you, we need to find a fix. Please advise.
  10. The attached files include the SLTT charter, a roster of SLTT participants, and a guidelines document that the Data Model Steering Committee has reviewed, revised, and endorsed. The guidelines set the philosophy and tone of how the SLTT should go about its business. We will not be scrutinized by the DMSC, but we do have a specific mission that body expects us to achieve.
  11. I encourage you to reach out to colleagues in your organization to discuss science-language issues. We represent our colleagues and speak for them—not in place of them.
  12. Travel and travel costs: Yes, there will be a face-to-face meeting among us. As a Team, and in conjunction with the DMSC, we will have to work out the mechanics of a face-to-face, and how (or if) funds can be identified to defray (not subsidize) travel costs. I think a face-to-face is essential, for it will unite us in our task and because inter-personal exchange of ideas is always better than the impersonal electronic forum. However, travel has its costs (time and money), and such costs cannot be treated in cavalier fashion. We will discuss this as we go along.
  13. Finally, if you have searched your gut and truly do not want to participate in the SLTT process, or have second thoughts owing to the press of other obligations, please inform me as soon as possible. I will wish you well and find a replacement for you. It is essential that we all feel good about this process, and truly want to be a part of it.

I will be on the road for most of this week, and not able to check my email for much of that time. Please use this period before 17 April to get yourself into the swing of things regarding geologic-map standards. I will be back in contact next week with more mechanical issues.

In the meantime, here is our first task:

In order to set the tone for our task and see how each of us views the information content of a geologic map, please come up with 20 data-base queries that you personally would want to launch at a digital geologic-map data base. We can exchange these query-lists by email, and post them at the web-conference site. Use the following syntax:

  1. show me all metasedimentary rocks;
  2. show me Paleozoic and Late Proterozoic metasedimentary rocks intruded by Cretaceous 2-mica monzogranite;
  3. show me all low-angle faults, irrespective of their extensional or contractional origin;
  4. show me all rock units affected by two generations of folding;
  5. show me all slope-failure deposits;
  6. show me all slope-failure deposits of slump-block and earth-flow origin;
  7. show me all surficial deposits with well-developed Bt soil horizons.

I will come through with my 20, but this quick sample represents just a smattering of topics and issues that I would need to retrieve from a typical geologic-map data base in southern California. Good luck, and have fun.

Personally, I am looking forward to working with all of you. Collectively, we represent a considerable body of common sense, scientific breadth, and geologic-map experience (either on the data-production side or the data-use side). With such a mix, I am confident that we will do justice to the notion of common standards for geologic-map terminology—or, if such standards can not be developed and adopted, then at least a good set of minds will have reached that conclusion.

Adios from Tucson, Jonathan

MEMORANDUM FROM SLTT CHAIR TO SLTT COMMITTEE MEMBERS (4/03/2000)

SCIENCE-LANGUAGE TECHNICAL TEAM

Guidance from the North American data-model Steering Committee
04/03/2000

MANDATE

The Science Language Technical Team (SLTT) is mandated to develop standardized nomenclature for digital geologic-map data bases, including (but not limited to) the following areas:

  1. nomenclature for the description and characterization of geologic-map units (lithology, stratigraphy, geomorphology, pedology, petrology, genesis, etc.)
  2. nomenclature for the description and characterization of linear geologic features (contacts, faults, fold axial traces, mapped marker units, geomorphic features, etc.),
  3. nomenclature for the description and characterization of point geologic features (structural points, etc.);
  4. nomenclature for descriptive and interpretive information about spatial and geologic relations among geologic map units, linear features, and point features (e.g., sequencing relations, stratigraphic relations, and geometric relations, etc.).

GUIDING PRINCIPLES

  1. The SLTT’s focus is digital geologic-map data bases—NOT geologic maps. Geologic maps as cartographic products should be viewed by the SLTT as derivative output FROM the data bases, not as mainline products supported BY the data bases;
  2. The SLTT’s focus is the geoscience content of geologic-map data bases—not data-base design. SLTT recommendations and decisions regarding geoscience concepts and their attendant vocabulary and inter-relations will be passed upward to the Steering Committee and laterally to the Data-model Design Technical Team for evaluation and incorporation into data-model modification and tool development;
  3. Geoscience classification and nomenclature scheme(s) should be scale-independent;
  4. Classification and nomenclature scheme(s) should allow the data-base author to describe and interpret geologic elements as richly or poorly as the data allow—even within a single data base. To support this functionality, nomenclatural items should be related hierarchically in a way that allows geologic materials and geologic structures to be described and interpreted in progressively more detail and richness while still allowing them to be grouped into progressively broader categories;
  5. Classification and nomenclatural scheme(s) should be robust enough to provide stability and consistency of usage, but flexible enough to accommodate differences owing to regional or institutional mapping traditions or mission requirements;
  6. Classification and nomenclatural scheme(s) should allow the data bases to be queried for standardized geoscience concepts and geoscience attributes—ranging from the mundane to the sophisticated. Data-base queries can be only as successful as the architecture and language of the geologic data base that is queried;
  7. Classification and nomenclatural scheme(s) should accommodate all audiences and data-base users—from the educated lay audience through the end-user in local through Federal agencies, culminating in the technical geoscience user in academic and institutional audiences;
  8. Classification and nomenclatural scheme(s) should integrate seamlessly with a broad range of interdisciplinary data bases—including (but not limited to) engineering, geophysical, geochemical, hydrologic, environmental, and geographic data bases and interactive applications.

MEMORANDUM FROM SLTT CHAIR (MATTI) TO SLTT COMMITTEE MEMBERS
(12/01/2000)

SCIENCE-LANGUAGE TECHNICAL TEAM

Action Plan
1 December, 2000

SLTT colleagues:

About 15 of us got together the morning of 13 November [at Geological Society of America Annul Meeting, Reno, Nevada, 2000] to discuss general issues and to develop an action plan for our science-language activities. This document summarizes the discussions, and provides the guidance for our activities over the next few months.

Participants

Lucy Edwards (USGS)
Bruce Johnson (USGS)
Ron Kistler (USGS)
Alison Klingbyle (GSC)
Diane Lane (USGS)
Steve Ludington (USGS)
Jim MacDonald (Ohio Geological Survey)
Jon Matti (USGS)
David Miller (USGS)
Steve Richard (Arizona Geological Survey)
Peter Schweitzer (USGS)
Loudon Stanford (Idaho Geological Survey)
Andy Rorick (U.S. Forest Service)
Richard Watson (U.S. Bureau of Land Management)
Jerry Weisenfluh (Kentucky Geological Survey)

(1) What we need to do

  1. definitions of control-terms
  2. diagrams of parent-child relations
  3. Minimal boiler-plate that describes our results and places them in the context of the proposed North American geologic-map data model

(2) Specific components of 1.0 strawman

  1. rock name (e.g., limestone, monzogranite, blueschist, colluvium)
  2. lithologic attribute (e.g., coarse-grained, fissil-weathering, thin-bedded, unconsolidated, texturally massive, porphyritic, porphyroclastic, mullion)
  3. rock genesis (e.g., marine, nonmarine, alluvial, plutonic, volcanic, fluvial, colluvial, dynamothermal, high-strain)
  4. genetic structures (e.g., flow foliation, eutaxitic fabric, cumulate layering, graded bedding, sole structures, slaty cleavage, earth flow,)
  1. Harland and others (1989)
  2. IUGS timescale (Remane, 2000)
  3. time scales compiled in Berggren and others (1995)

(3) Target Audience

Science language should be technical—that is, it should be developed by and speak to the trained geologist. Although we all are concerned about how the professional and non-professional non-geoscience audience will access and understand our database content, this concern should be addressed by a technical team tasked with designing the data-model user interface.

(4) Basis and scale of terminology

Map-unit categories (i.e., formation, member, tongue, lentil, bed) are conceived and extended through a process that integrates hierarchical observations beginning at the hand-sample and outcrop level but extending to the hillside and regional level and augmented by the thin-section and chemical-analysis level. Thus, hierarchical terminology schemes leading to map-unit description should reflect:

(5) Existing strawman-classifications for consideration include (but are not limited to):

(6) In addition to nomenclature for sedimentary, igneous, metamorphic, and surficial materials, we need to develop language for the following materials:

(7) The following rules MUST be adhered to:

(8) To assist data-model design team, we need to distinguish between the following terms:

(9) To assist data-model design team in developing a map-unit characterization field

References Cited

Berggren, W.A., Kent, D.V., Aubry, M-P., and Hardenbol, J., eds., 1995, Geochronology, time scales and global stratigraphic correlation: Tulsa, Oklahoma, Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists, Special Publication 54, 386 p.

Harland, B.W., Armstrong, R.L., Cox, A.V., Craig, L.E., Smith. A.G., and Smith, D.G., 1989, A geologic time scale, 1989: New York, Cambridge University Press, 246 p.

Remane, Jurgen, compiler, 2000, International Stratigraphic Chart: Division of Earth Sciences, UNESCO, 16 p., 1 plate. Published in cooperation with the International Union of Geological Sciences and the International Commission on Stratigraphy.

MEMORANDUM FROM SLTT CHAIR (MATTI) TO SLTT SEDIMENTARY
AND SURFICIAL SUBGROUP MEMBERS (2/15/2001)

Sedimentary and Surficial Subgroup Colleagues:  
02/15/2001

Now that the surficial and sedimentary SLTT teams both have launched their deliberations, we need to address an issue of concern to both teams.

Several members of the sedimentary group have indicated concern about possible overlap between “unconsolidated” sediment and unconsolidated surficial materials. This concern originates from the British Geological Survey’s (BGS) classification of sedimentary materials into “lithified” and “unlithified” materials:

“The primary classification of sediments and sedimentary rocks is based on their compositional attributes present at the time of deposition. This allows sediments to be classified by the same compositional boundaries as sedimentary rocks.”

The following points address this issue, and seek to clarify the unique assignments of the surficial-materials team and the sedimentary team. As you see fit, please comment on any of the points:

  1. I do not think the BGS blurs the boundaries between their “unlithified sediment” and “unconsolidated surficial materials”;
  2. The BGS scheme simply provides names for unlithified sediment that are parallel with the names for lithified sedimentary rock;
  3. The surficial team is charged with developing a classification of surficial materials like “alluvium”, “colluvium”, “landslides”, and so forth. I suspect that the group will come up with classification categories such as “alluvial deposits”, “colluvial deposits”, “landslide deposits”, etc., all representative of surficial materials that are relatively “unlithified”;
  4. These surficial materials will have certain physical properties (such as grain size, particle shape, bedding thickness, grain composition, grain-matrix ratios, color, etc.) that will overlap with the physical properties of sedimentary materials, both lithified and unlithified. This overlap will be especially obvious between surficial materials that are water-laid and unlithified sediment that is water-laid: the two are one and the same, are they not? And that is the source of the apparent overlap;
  5. Should both the surficial team and the sedimentary team independently create classification schemes for (a) unlithified sand bodies that form bars on the Platte braided-river plain or (b) unlithified sand bodies in coastal chenier plains or (c) unlithified oolitic shoals in the Bahamas or (d) unlithified mudrock and channelized sand bodies in the Mississippi River delta?
  6. My answer to question (5) is “no”. I expect that the surficial team will view those specific examples as surficial materials that could be classified and named and mapped as (a) alluvium, braid-plain type or (b) paralic deposits, chenier-plain type or (c) marine surficial deposits, carbonate, oolitic-shoal type or (d) alluvial deposits, deltaic (to name some hypothetical possibilities);
  7. I believe that the physical properties of unlithified deposits and the naming of specific sediment types they contain, are the purview of the sedimentary team. This is the position the BGS takes, I believe;
  8. Thus, for points (5) and (6): (a) alluvium, braid-plain type, may consist of medium-bedded, texturally massive to flat-laminated, moderately sorted, medium- to coarse-grained quartzofeldspathic lithic sand, while (b) paralic deposits may consist of crudely bedded flat-laminated to trough-laminated, well-sorted, fine- to medium-grained quartz arenite sand while (c) marine surficial deposits, carbonate, oolitic-shoal type may consist of. . ..etc.;
  9. I think the tasks of the two teams will be clarified if we adopt the following:
  1. The distinction between “consolidated” and “unconsolidated” or between “lithified” and “unlithified” is going to be a vexing issue, irrespective of the issues raised in the preceding nine points. I will not venture into this now.

Please ruminate over the ideas in this note. If we are not on the same page on this one, we could get into trouble. I am just thinking out loud, so give it your own treatment.

Adios, Jonathan

MEMORANDUM FROM SLTT CHAIR (MATTI) TO SLTT COMMITTEE MEMBERS
(3/14/2001)

Sedimentary and Surficial Subgroup Colleagues:  
03/14/2001

Recent discussion within some of the subgroups indicates the need to restate and clarify the purpose of our SLTT goals and the nature of our classification activities. Please read this memo carefully and at your earliest convenience. If any of you has major reservations, concerns, or disagreements about these objectives, please raise them to all of us now. By separate mailing, I am sending a copy of this memo to the North American Data Model Steering Committee, whose members also are asked to comment and evaluate the statements.

(1) Databases versus geologic-maps: Our purpose is to develop classification structures for digital geologic-map databases, not for digital versions of geologic maps. The production of a geologic-map plot is incidental to the database, and is not the primary focus of the language that the SLTT is developing.

The difference in tone here is important: the hierarchical structure, number of rock classes, and other aspects of our language schema should be tailored to storing and searching science concepts in a digital database, not tailored to the requirements of database fields in a particular data model or tailored to the text in a geologic-map legend.

(2) Language for new data versus language for compilation: While the compilation of pre-existing geologic mapping obviously is part of a geologist’s activities, the SLTT’s primary driver is to develop schema that facilitate the classification and communication of new field information. We must look into the future toward novel ways of organizing new data, not into the past to find ways of facilitating the compilation of old data. The former will benefit the latter in obvious ways.

Map compilation (the collation, evaluation, interpretation, and translation of geologic-map information contained in products produced by other workers) is a necessary and legitimate goal. However, the creation of science language that supports geologic-map compilation is not the SLTT purpose.

(3) Do we need to accommodate pre-existing science language?: Compilation of pre-existing geologic-map information requires the geologist to deal with a wide array of lithologic names and descriptors that have come down through the generations. Should the SLTT classification schema create a place for these terms, or define equivalencies for them?

No. Our task is to create a single uniform, coherent classification that logically, objectively, and thoughtfully establishes rock names and descriptors that classify geologic materials accurately and comprehensively according to modern usage. We are not obliged to create a list of synonyms or equivalencies. We are not necessarily required to make a place for previous usage, no matter how entrenched that usage might be.

For the compilation of pre-existing map information, it is (and always should be) the responsibility of the map compiler to interpret what a published geologic map contains, and to place this information in the context of modern rock classifications. This is why geologists (who have the training and expertise to make geologic judgments) should be map compilers. The SLTT classification schema will be the modern standard for geologic-map database attributes. It will be the responsibility of future map compilers to interpret the nomenclature of pre-existing geologic-map information for its position in the SLTT schema, not the responsibility of the SLTT to accommodate all previous language. Pre-existing language should be treated either in feature-level metadata or dataset metadata: this will create a paper trail for original usage, but will not burden the SLTT schema with the diverse nomenclature of the past.

(4) Language for data producer versus end user: The lithologic classification schema we are developing are NOT for the end user, but for the geologist who is collecting attribute data and populating a database with the attributes. The production of derivative databases and map plots that serve end users is not the SLTT concern.

Does this mean that the SLTT is not mindful of end-users? Nope. Each of the four subgroups is working hard to develop science language that will form a foundation for users of all kinds—from technical to non-technical. But the SLTT focus needs to be geologist-directed in order for the multiple-user base to be served.

We all are interested in and concerned about how end users access and use geologic-map information. However, I strongly believe that the proper focus of end-user facilitation should be the design of an appropriate user-interface. It will be the job of (a) the SLTT, (b) the data-model design team, and (c) a user-interface team (currently not designated) to design an appropriate tool-set to take the concepts and language designed by the SLTT and make them user-friendly.

(5) Hand-sample language versus map-unit language: The SLTT mandate is to provide classification schema for individual rock types that occur in geologic-map units, together with language that describes the physical appearance, composition, and genesis of these rock types. The science language must focus on hand-sample and outcrop-scale attributes, but should include rock names and fabric relations that derive from thin-section observations as well as language for sequencing and stratigraphic relations at the map-unit scale.

(6) How comprehensive or finite should our classification schema be? Our science language should reflect the realities of geology, not the requirements of end users. However, the geologic universe is complex, so should the classification schema be complex and opaque? Nope. And that is the challenge: to represent rock names and rock structures within families that bring order to the complexity.

In a note to the metamorphic subgroup, Bruce Johnson correctly pointed out that “ if the classification is hierarchical, and the first and second levels of the hierarchy are limited to a small number of classes, then it becomes possible to render the map by ignoring lower levels”. Bruce’s concern here is that the plethora of detail that we could create in our classification schema should not bar the database user from perceiving the major high-level relationships among geologic elements. I agree completely. However, if logically structured, then the number of classes or branches or levels of the hierarchy will not matter.

In my opinion, the user interface will be THE critical device for sorting through the database from higher (general) levels to lower (detailed) levels to accommodate user needs.

(7) Do we need flow charts and glossaries?: To the extent that we must define control terms and root names, etc., then to that extent we are defining a glossary of terms. One strength of the British Geological Survey Rock Classification schemes is the decision-making pathways (flowcharts) that the schemes establish for the use of data producer and data-compiler (and ultimately, from an interface point of view, the data user). A decision-support mechanism is a natural fallout of control terms: the terms must have definitions, and a decision process must be executed in order for a control term to be used or not used by the geologist and end-user. A flow chart is a logical device for displaying the decision-support process.

Let me end by sharing what I am discovering while working with the sedimentary subgroup. In my opinion, we need hierarchical classification schema that allow the geologist to go as deep into the data-attribution process as possible—without getting painted into a corner. The BGS sedimentary classification scheme doesn’t have a lot of wiggle room in it. For example, feldspar-rich sedimentary rocks are termed “feldspathic arenites” as defined by Pettijohn. End of statement. End of choices. I personally would be more comfortable if an intermediate level existed that gave the geologist (and the end user) more generic terms like “feldspar-rich” or “lithic-rich”, before requiring the geologist (and the end user) to commit to the name “feldspathic arenite”. This would allow me to classify a rock in the field as a “feldspar-rich sandstone” based on hand-lens observation, and I could stick with this name if I never obtained modal data that would allow me to document the rock as a feldspathic arenite (sensu Pettijohn). My audience can get a lot out of the term “feldspar-rich sandstone”, even though I haven’t tagged the rock as a “feldspathic arenite” sensu strictu.

In other words, common sense needs to drive our process—and I ask that you work with each other to find this common sense. A purely academic approach to rock classification and description is not going to do us any good. Even though I minimized the role of the end-user as a target for our deliberations, none-the-less both the field geologist and the land-use manager need a classification that allows each to (a) classify a rock in as much detail as desirable and (b) search the forest before searching out individual trees.

In other words, we do not have an easy job.

Adios, Jonathan


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National Cooperative Geologic Mapping Program | Geology Discipline | Open-File Reports
U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey
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