About This Item

Share This Item

The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract


Volume: 58 (1974)

Issue: 10. (October)

First Page: 2207

Last Page: 2207

Title: Environmental Geologic Atlas, Texas Coastal Zone: Role of Geology in Previous HitLandNext Hit-Use Planning: ABSTRACT

Author(s): L. F. Brown Jr., W. L. Fisher

Article Type: Meeting abstract

Abstract:

The Environmental Geologic Atlas of the Texas Coastal Zone, which required 25 man-years of research, was initiated in 1969 to meet a growing need for basic Previous HitlandNext Hit resource information about one of the most rapidly developing regions of Texas. The coastal zone, covering about 20,000 sq mi, is not only an area of accelerating, competitive, and, sometimes, conflicting Previous HitlandNext Hit use, but it is also a region of dynamic natural processes and delicately balanced environments. The coastal zone is underlain by a wide variety of Pleistocene and Holocene/modern facies with differing physical properties and Previous HitlandNext Hit-use capabilities. Large-scale mapping (1:24,000) of first-order units, including substrates, biology, processes, and man-made features, resulted in the principal environmental resou ce document--the Environmental Geology Map. This map, at a scale of 1:125,000, displays the distribution of 130 units, which comprise both Pleistocene and Holocene/modern fluvial, deltaic, barrier-strandplain-chenier, offshore, bay-lagoon-estuary, marsh-swamp, eolian, and man-made coastal systems.

A series of 8 Special-Use Environmental Maps at a scale of 1:250,000 were, in part, derived from the Environmental Geology Map, and, in part, compiled from other extensive data sources. The special-use map series includes: Physical Properties; Environments and Biologic Assemblages; Current Previous HitLandNext Hit Use; Mineral and Energy Resources; Active processes; Man-Made Features and Water Systems; Rainfall, Stream Discharge, and Surface Salinity; and Topography and Bathymetry. These maps, which contain about 150 units, were designed for the special requirements of various users; an almost unlimited number of such special-use and thematic maps can be generated from the basic map data.

A further step toward application of environmental geologic information in Previous HitlandNext Hit-use planning was derivation of fundamental planning units based on carrying capacity. These units alternately have been termed resource-capability units and Previous HitlandNext Hit-resource units. Each Previous HitlandNext Hit-resource unit is an areally defined entity that exhibits a unique set of properties, which limits or sustains its use for the wide variety of human activities. The properties of Previous HitlandNext Hit-resource or resource-capability units, which can be quantified and digitized, may serve as principal input into Previous HitlandNext Hit-use inventory and planning systems being devised to support future Previous HitlandNext Hit-use decisions. A Previous HitlandNext Hit-use planning system that is based realistically upon the nature and variability of natural systems and coastal substrates can provide a commonsense, flexible, and fair approach to Previous HitlandNext Hit-use planning. Such a system provides potential users with options long before development becomes a reality, enabling users to plan for necessary engineering improvements and/or economic trade-offs. Fundamental geology is a critical element in such a Previous HitlandTop-use decision system.

End_of_Article - Last_Page 2207------------

Copyright 1997 American Association of Petroleum Geologists