Geodatabase of the datasets that represent the three subareas of the Silurian-Devonian aquifer, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, Ohio, Tennessee, and Wisconsin
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This geodatabase includes spatial datasets that represent the Silurian-Devonian aquifers in the States of Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, Ohio, Tennessee, and Wisconsin. Included are: (1) polygon extents; datasets that represent the aquifer system extent, and the entire extent subdivided into subareas, (2) raster datasets for the altitude of the top and bottom surfaces of the entire aquifer (where data are available), and (3) altitude contours used to generate the surface rasters. The digitized contours are supplied for reference. The extent of the Silurian-Devonian aquifers is from the linework of the Silurian-Devonian aquifer extent maps in U.S. Geological Survey U.S. Geological Survey Hydrologic Atlas 730, Chapters J and K, (USGS HA 730-J, -K) and a digital version of the aquifer extent presented in the National Aquifer Code Reference List, available at http://water.usgs.gov/ogw/NatlAqCode-reflist.html , "silurian.zip". The extent was then modified for each subarea: Subarea 1 (sa1): Primarily in Ohio and Indiana, subject of U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1423 B (USGS PP 1423B). Subarea 2 (sa2): In Iowa. Digital data were available from the Iowa Geologic Survey. Subarea 3 (sa3): Remaining area in Illinois, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Kentucky. Extent is that part of the National Aquifer Code Reference List polygon that remained when the areas of sa1 and sa2 were removed. The altitude and thickness contours that were available for each subarea were compiled or generated from georeferenced figures of altitude contours in USGS PP 1423B for sa1, digital data from IAGS for sa2. There were no vertical data for sa3. The resultant top and bottom altitude values were interpolated into surface rasters within a GIS using tools that create hydrologically correct surfaces from contour data, derive the altitude from the thickness (depth from the land surface), and merge the subareas into a single surface. The primary tool was an enhanced version of "Topo to Raster" used in ArcGIS, ArcMap, Esri 2014. The raster surfaces were corrected in the areas where the altitude of an underlying layer of the aquifer exceeded the altitude of an overlying layer.
Geodatabase of the datasets used to represent the four aquifer subunits of the Cambrian-Ordovician aquifer system, Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin
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This geodatabase includes spatial datasets that represent the Cambrian-Ordovician aquifer system in the States of Wisconsin, Michigan, Minnesota, Iowa, and Illinois. Included are: (1) a polygon dataset that represents the aquifer system extent, (2) raster datasets for the altitude of each aquifer subunit, (3) altitude, or if applicable, thickness contours used to generate the surface rasters, (4) georeferenced images of the figures that were digitized to create the altitude or thickness contours, (5) the line datasets representing the altitude contours that were digitized from the images, and (6) an ArcGIS Toolbox used to develop the surface raster datasets. The images and digitized contours are supplied for reference. The extent of the Cambrian-Ordovician aquifer system is from the linework of the Cambrian-Ordovician aquifer system extent maps in U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1405-B (PP1405B), and a digital version of the aquifer extent presented in the Groundwater Atlas of the United States (the U.S. Geological Survey Hydrologic Atlas 730-J, (USGS HA 730-J) and 730-K (USGS HA 730-K)), available at http://water.usgs.gov/ogw/NatlAqCode-reflist.html . The Cambrian-Ordovician Aquifer System has four aquifer subunits, in order from the most surficial to the deepest: (A1) St. Peter Sandstone Aquifer, (A2) Prairie du Chien Aquifer, (A3) Ironton and Galesville Sandstone Aquifer, and (A4) Mt. Simon or Lamotte Sandstone Aquifer. The altitude contour line datasets for each subunit available were digitized from georeferenced figures of altitude contours in PP1405B, and the altitude values were interpolated into surface rasters within a GIS using tools that create hydrologically correct surfaces from contour data, derives the altitude from the thickness (depth from the land surface), and merges the subareas into a single surface. The primary tool was "Topo to Raster" used in ArcGIS, ArcMap, Esri 2014. (ArcGIS Desktop: Release 10.2 Redlands, CA: Environmental Systems Research Institute). The surface rasters were corrected for the areas where the altitude of the top of the aquifer exceeded the land surface, and where the bottom of an aquifer exceeded the altitude of the corrected top of the aquifer.
Geodatabase of the available top and bottom surface datasets that represent the Mississippian aquifer, Alabama, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia
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This geodatabase includes spatial datasets that represent the Mississippian aquifer in the States of Alabama, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia. The aquifer is divided into three subareas, based on the data availability. In subarea 1 (SA1), which is the aquifer extent in Iowa, data exist of the aquifer top altitude and aquifer thickness. In subarea 2 (SA2), which is the aquifer extent in Missouri, data exist of the aquifer top and bottom aquifer surface altitudes. In subarea 3 (SA3), which is the aquifer area of the remaining States, no altitude or thickness data exist. Included in this geodatabase are: (1) a feature dataset "ds40MSSPPI_altitude_and_thickness_contours that includes aquifer altitude and thickness contours used to generate the surface rasters for SA1 and SA2, (2) a feature dataset "ds40MSSPPI_extents" that includes a polygon dataset that represents the subarea extents, a polygon dataset that represents the combined overall aquifer extent, and a polygon dataset of the Ft. Dodge Fault and Manson Anomaly, (3) raster datasets that represent the altitude of the top and the bottom of the aquifer in SA1 and SA2, and (4) georeferenced images of the figures that were digitized to create the aquifer top- and bottom-altitude contours or aquifer thickness contours for SA1 and SA2. The images and digitized contours are supplied for reference. The extent of the Mississippian aquifer for all subareas was produced from the digital version of the HA-730 Mississippian aquifer extent, (USGS HA-730). For the two Subareas with vertical-surface information, SA1 and SA2, data were retrieved from the sources as described below. 1. The aquifer-altitude contours for the top and the aquifer-thickness contours for the top-to-bottom thickness of SA1 were received in digital format from the Iowa Geologic Survey. The URL for the top was ftp://ftp.igsb.uiowa.edu/GIS_Library/IA_State/Hydrologic/Ground_Waters/ Mississippian_aquifer/mississippian_topography.zip. The URL for the thickness was ftp://ftp.igsb.uiowa.edu/GIS_Library/IA_State/Hydrologic/Ground_Waters/ Mississippian_aquifer/mississippian_isopach.zip Reference for the top map is Altitude and Configuration, in feet above mean sea level, of the Mississipian Aquifer modified from a scanned image of Map 1, Sheet 1, Miscellaneous Map Series 3, Mississippian Aquifer of Iowa by P.J. Horick and W.L. Steinhilber, Iowa Geological Survey, 1973; IGS MMS-3, Map 1, Sheet 1 Reference for the thickness map is Distribution and isopach thickness, in feet, of the Mississipian Aquifer, modified from a scanned image of Map 1, Sheet 2, Miscellaneous Map Series 3, Mississippian Aquifer of Iowa by P.J. Horick and W.L. Steinhilber, Iowa Geological Survey, 1973; IGS MMS-3, Map 1, Sheet 2 2. The altitude contours for the top and bottom of SA2 were digitized from georeferenced figures of altitude contours in U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1305 (USGS PP1305), figure 6 (for the top surface) and figure 9 (for the bottom surface). The altitude contours for SA1 and SA2 were interpolated into surface rasters within a GIS using tools that create hydrologically correct surfaces from contour data, derive the altitude from the thickness (depth from the land surface), and merge the subareas into a single surface. The primary tool was an enhanced version of "Topo to Raster" used in ArcGIS, ArcMap, Esri 2014. ArcGIS Desktop: Release 10.2 Redlands, CA: Environmental Systems Research Institute. The raster surfaces were corrected in areas where the altitude of the top of the aquifer exceeded the land surface, and where the bottom of an aquifer exceeded the altitude of the corrected top of the aquifer.
Pennsylvanian aquifers
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This data set represents the extent of the Pennsylvanian aquifers in the states of Pennsylavania, West Virginia, Ohio, Virginia, Kentucky, North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Illinois, Indiana, and Michigan.