Geologic Map of the Corona North 7.5' Quadrangle Riverside and San Bernardino Counties, California, USGS OFR 02-22
Entry ID:
USGS_OFR_0222
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Summary
The data set for the Corona North 7.5' quadrangle was prepared under the U.S. Geological Survey Southern California Areal Mapping Project (SCAMP) as part of an ongoing effort to develop a regional geologic framework of southern California, and to utilize a Geographic Information System (GIS) format to create regional digital geologic databases. These regional ... databases are being developed as contributions to the National Geologic Map Database of the National Cooperative Geologic Mapping Program of the USGS. This data set maps and describes the geology of the Corona North 7.5' quadrangle, Riverside and San Bernardino Counties, California. Created using Environmental Systems Research Institute's ARC/INFO software, the data base consists of the following items: (1) a map coverage containing geologic contacts and units, (2) a coverage containing structural data, (3) a coverage containing geologic unit annotation and leaders, and (4) attribute tables for geologic units (polygons), contacts (arcs), and site-specific data (points). In addition, the data set includes the following graphic and text products: (1) a postscript graphic plot-file containing the geologic map, topography, cultural data, a Correlation of Map Units (CMU) diagram, a Description of Map Units (DMU), and a key for point and line symbols, and (2) PDF files of the Readme (including the metadata file as an appendix), and the graphic produced by the Postscript plot file. The Corona North quadrangle is located near the northern end of the Peninsular Ranges Province. All but the southeastern tip of the quadrangle is within the Perris block, a relatively stable, rectangular in plan area located between the Elsinore and San Jacinto fault zones. The southeastern tip of the quadrangle is barely within the Elsinore fault zone. The quadrangle is underlain by Cretaceous plutonic rocks that are part of the composite Peninsular Ranges batholith. These rocks are exposed in a triangular-shaped area bounded on the north by the Santa Ana River and on the south by Temescal Wash, a major tributary of the Santa Ana River. A variety of mostly silicic granitic rocks occur in the quadrangle, and are mainly of monzogranite and granodioritic composition, but range in composition from micropegmatitic granite to gabbro. Most rock units are massive and contain varying amounts of meso- and melanocratic equant-shaped inclusions. The most widespread granitic rock is monzogranite of the Cajalco pluton, a large pluton that extends some distance south of the quadrangle. North of Corona is a body of micropegmatite that appears to be unique in the batholith rocks. Diagonally bisecting the quadrangle is the Santa Ana River. North of the Santa Ana River alluvial deposits are dominated by the distal parts of alluvial fans emanating from the San Gabriel Mountains north of the quadrangle. Widespread areas of the fan deposits are covered by a thin layer of wind blown sand. Alluvial deposits in the triangular-shaped area between the Santa Ana River and Temescal Wash are quite varied, but consist principally of locally derived older alluvial fan deposits. These deposits rest on remnants of older, early Quaternary or late Tertiary age, nonmarine sedimentary deposits that were derived from both local sources and sources as far away as the San Bernardino Mountains. These deposits in part were deposited by an ancestral Santa Ana River. Older are a few scattered remnants of late Tertiary (Pliocene) marine sandstone that include some conglomerate lenses. Clasts in the conglomerate include siliceous volcanic rocks exotic to this part of southern California. This sandstone was deposited as the southeastern-most part of the Los Angeles sedimentary marine basin and was deposited along a rocky shoreline developed in the granitic rocks, much like the present day shoreline at Monterey, California. Most of the sandstone and granitic paleoshoreline features have been removed by quarrying and grading in the area of Porphyry north to Highway 91. Excellent exposures in highway road cuts still remain on the north side of Highway 91 just east of the 91-15 interchange and on the east side of U.S. 15 just north of the interchange. South of Temescal Wash is a series of both younger and older alluvial fan deposits emanating from the Santa Ana Mountains to the southeast. In the immediate southwest corner of the quadrangle is a small exposure of sandstone and pebble conglomerate of the Sycamore Canyon member of the Puente Formation of early Pliocene and Miocene age and sandstone and conglomerate of undivided Sespe and Vaqueros Formations of early Miocene, Oligocene, and late Eocene age. The geologic map data base contains original U.S. Geological Survey data generated by detailed field observation recorded on 1:24,000 scale aerial photographs. The map was created by transferring lines from the aerial photographs to a 1:24,000 scale topographic base. The map was digitized and lines, points, and polygons were subsequently edited using standard ARC/INFO commands. Digitizing and editing artifacts significant enough to display at a scale of 1:24,000 were corrected. Within the database, geologic contacts are represented as lines (arcs), geologic units are polygons, and site-specific data as points. Polygon, arc, and point attribute tables (.pat, .aat, and .pat, respectively) uniquely identify each geologic datum.
Multimedia Sample
View full image
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Geographic Coverage
Spatial coordinates
N: 34.0 |
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S: 33.87 |
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E: -117.5 |
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W: -117.63 |
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Data Set Citation
Dataset Creator:
Douglas M. Morton; C. H. Gray, Jr.
Dataset Title:
Geologic Map of the Corona North 7.5' Quadrangle, Riverside and San Bernardino Counties, California
Dataset Series Name:
U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report
Dataset Release Date:
2002
Dataset Release Place:
Menlo Park, California
Dataset Publisher:
U.S. Geological Survey
Version:
Version 1.0
Issue Identification:
OFR 02-22
Data Presentation Form:
vector digital data
Online Resource:
http://geopubs.wr.usgs.gov/open-file/of02-022/
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Temporal Coverage
Start Date:
2002-01-01
Stop Date:
2002-12-31
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Location Keywords
Data Resolution
Latitude Resolution:
1.000366806984 m
Longitude Resolution:
1.000366806984 m
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Science Keywords
ISO Topic Category
Platform
Project
Access Constraints
None
Use Constraints
The Corona North 7.5' geologic-map database should be used to evaluate and understand the geologic character of the Corona North 7.5' quadrangle as a whole. The data should not be used for purposes of site-specific land-use planning or site-specific geologic evaluations. The database is sufficiently detailed to identify and characterize many actual and potential ... geologic hazards represented by faults and landslides and posed by ground subsidence and earthquake-generated ground shaking. However, it is not sufficiently detailed for site-specific determinations or evaluations of these features. Faults shown do not take the place of fault-rupture hazard zones designated by the California State Geologist (see Hart, 1988). Use of this digital geologic-map database should not violate the spatial resolution of the data. Although the digital form of the data removes the constraint imposed by the scale of a paper map, the detail and accuracy inherent in map scale are also present in the digital data. The fact that this database was compiled and edited at a scale of 1:24,000 means that higher resolution information may not have been uniformly retained in the data set. Plotting at scales larger than 1:24,000 will not yield greater real detail, although it may reveal fine-scale irregularities below the intended resolution of the database. Similarly, although higher resolution data is incorporated in most of the map, the resolution of the combined output will be limited by the lower resolution data.
Ancillary Keywords
Data Set Progress
Originating Center
Data Center
Distribution
Distribution Media:
online
Distribution Size:
1.5 megabytes
Distribution Format:
ArcInfo export
Fees:
none
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Personnel
DOUGLAS
M.
MORTON
Role:
TECHNICAL CONTACT
Phone:
(909) 276-6397
Fax:
(909) 276-6295
Email:
scamp at usgs.gov
Contact Address:
U.S. Geological Survey
Department of Earth Sciences
University of California, Riverside
City:
Riverside
Province or State:
CA
Postal Code:
92521
Country:
USA
RACHEL
M.
HAUSER
Role:
DIF AUTHOR
Phone:
(909) 276-6397
Fax:
(909) 276-6295
Email:
rhauser at usgs.gov
Contact Address:
U.S. Geological Survey
Department of Earth Sciences
University of California, Riverside
City:
Riverside
Province or State:
CA
Postal Code:
92521
Country:
USA
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Related URL
Link:
GET DATA
Description:
Access to data and documentation for OFR 02-22
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Publications/References
Morton, Douglas M. , and C. H. Gray, Jr., 2002, Geologic Map of the Corona North 7.5' Quadrangle, Riverside and San Bernardino Counties, California: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 02-22, U.S. Geological Survey, Menlo Park, California. Morton, D.M., 1999, Preliminary digital geologic map of the Santa Ana 30'x60' quadrangle, southern California, version 1.0.: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 99-172, U.S. Geological Survey, California. http://geopubs.wr.usgs.gov/open-file/of99-172/
Creation and Review Dates
DIF Creation Date:
2001-11-26
Last DIF Revision Date:
2005-04-11
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