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Value | Definition |
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Rg | The dominant texture (> 50%) Rock (R) is given the upper case letter and the subordinate texture (< 50%) gravel (g) is given a lower case letter. |
Gr | The dominant texture (> 50%) Gravel (G) is given the upper case letter and the subordinate texture (< 50%) rock (r) is given a lower case letter. |
Gs | The dominant texture (> 50%) Gravel (G) is given the upper case letter and the subordinate texture (< 50%) sand (s) is given a lower case letter. |
M | The end-member texture (~ 100%) Mud (M) is the primary texture. |
Ms | The dominant texture (> 50%) Mud (M) is given the upper case letter and the subordinate texture (< 50%) sand (s) is given a lower case letter. |
S | The end-member texture (~ 100%) Sand (S) is the primary texture. |
Sg | The dominant texture (> 50%) Sand (S) is given the upper case letter and the subordinate texture (< 50%) gravel (g) is given a lower case letter. |
Sm | The dominant texture (> 50%) Sand (S) is given the upper case letter and the subordinate texture (< 50%) mud (m) is given a lower case letter. |
Rs | The dominant texture (> 50%) Rock (R) is given the upper case letter and the subordinate texture (< 50%) sand (s) is given a lower case letter. |
Sr | The dominant texture (> 50%) Sand (S) is given the upper case letter and the subordinate texture (< 50%) rock (r) is given a lower case letter. |
Mg | The dominant texture (> 50%) Mud (M) is given the upper case letter and the subordinate texture (< 50%) gravel (g) is given a lower case letter. |
G | The end-member texture (~ 100%) Gravel (G) is the primary texture. |
N/A | There was not enough source input data to define sediment texture within this area. |
Value | Definition |
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sand | Sediment whose primary component (> 50%) is sand |
hardbottom | Sediment whose primary component is rock, boulder, cobble, or coarse gravel |
mud | Sediment whose primary component (> 50%) is silt and clay |
N/A | There was not enough source input data to define simple sediment texture within this area. |
Value | Definition |
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yes | bedforms are present within some part of the traced polygon in the source acoustic data |
no | bedforms are not present within any part of the traced polygon in the source acoustic data |
Value | Definition |
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coarse pebbles | sediment class whose phi size is between -5 and -4 |
coarse silt | sediment class whose phi size is between 4 and 5 |
coarse sand | sediment class whose phi size is between 0 and 1 |
cobble | sediment class whose phi size is between -6 and -8 |
fine pebbles | sediment class whose phi size is between -2 and -3 |
fine sand | sediment class whose phi size is between 2 and 3 |
fine silt | sediment class whose phi size is between 6 and 7 |
granules | sediment class whose phi size is between -1 and -2 |
medium pebbles | sediment class whose phi size is between -3 and -4 |
medium sand | sediment class whose phi size is between 2 and 1 |
medium silt | sediment class whose phi size is between 5 and 6 |
very coarse pebbles | sediment class whose phi size is between -5 and -6 |
very coarse sand | sediment class whose phi size is between 0 and -1 |
very fine sand | sediment class whose phi size is between 3 and 4 |
very fine silt | sediment class whose phi size is between 7 and 8 |
N/A | sediment class whose phi size could not be determined from grain size data or there were no samples with laboratory analyzed grain size statistics within the polygon |
Value | Definition |
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1 | Sediment texture regions that were defined based on the highest resolution bathymetry (5m) and backscatter (1m), bottom photos, sediment samples, and seismic interpretations were given the highest data interpretation confidence value of 1 (very high confidence). |
2 | Areas where sediment texture was defined based on bathymetry of 30m resolution, backscatter of 1m resolution, bottom photos, and sediment samples were given an interpretation confidence value of 2 (high confidence). |
3 | A confidence value of 3 (moderate confidence) was given to areas with lidar and sediment samples, but no bottom photos or high density seismic interpretations. |
4 | The lowest confidence values (4) were given to areas where only sample and aerial photography data were available. |
Range of values | |
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Minimum: | 0 |
Maximum: | 169 |
Units: | count |
Resolution: | 1 |
Range of values | |
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Minimum: | 0 |
Maximum: | 97.9 |
Units: | percent |
Resolution: | 0.1 |
Range of values | |
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Minimum: | 2 |
Maximum: | 100 |
Units: | percent |
Resolution: | 0.01 |
Range of values | |
---|---|
Minimum: | 0 |
Maximum: | 67.2 |
Units: | percent |
Resolution: | 0.1 |
Range of values | |
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Minimum: | 0 |
Maximum: | 48.0 |
Units: | percent |
Resolution: | 0.1 |
Range of values | |
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Minimum: | -5.2 |
Maximum: | 7.5 |
Units: | phi |
Resolution: | 0.01 |
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Access_Constraints | None |
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Use_Constraints | Not to be used for navigation. Public domain data from the U.S. Government are freely redistributable with proper metadata and source attribution. Please recognize the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) as the source of this information. Additionally, there are limitations associated with qualitative sediment mapping interpretations. Because of the scale of the source geophysical data and the spacing of samples, not all changes in sea floor texture are captured. The data were mapped between 1:8,000 and 1:25,000, but the recommended scale for application of these data is 1:25,000. Features below 5,000 m2 or less than 50 m wide were not digitized due to positional uncertainty, lack of sample information, and the often ephemeral nature of small-scale sea floor features. Not all digitized sea floor features contained sample information, so often the sea floor texture is characterized by the nearest similar feature that contains a sample. Conversely, sometimes a digitized feature contained multiple samples and not all of the samples within the feature were in agreement (of the same texture). In these cases the dominant sediment texture was chosen to represent the primary texture for the polygon. Samples from rocky areas often only consist of bottom photographs, because large particle size often prevents the recovery of a sediment sample. Bottom photo classification can be subjective, such that determining the sediment type that is greater than 50% of the view frame is estimated by the interpreter and may differ among interpreters. Bottom photo transects often reveal changes in the sea floor over distances of less than 100 m and these changes are often not observable in acoustic data. Heterogeneous sea floor texture can change very quickly, and many small-scale changes will not be detectable or mappable at a scale of 1:25,000. The boundaries of polygons are often inferred based on sediment samples, and even boundaries that are traced based on amplitude changes in geophysical data are subject to migration. Polygon boundaries should be considered an approximation of the location of a change in texture. |
Data format: | WinZip (v 14.5) file contains qualitatively derived polygons that define sea floor texture and distribution from Nahant to Salisbury, MA and the associated metadata in format Shapefile (version ArcGIS 10.2) Esri Polygon Shapefile Size: 0.9 |
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Network links: |
https://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2015/1153/GIS_catalog/SedimentTexture/SedCover.zip https://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2015/1153/html/ofr20151153_GIS_catalog.html https://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2015/1153/ |