Galatia Channel:Other Channels Related to the Galatia Channel: Difference between revisions

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==Other Channels Related to the Galatia Channel==
Several paleochannels have been mapped that are similar to the Galatia channel in age and mode of formation. Previous authors have named some of these channels; others are named herein.  
Several paleochannels have been mapped that are similar to the Galatia channel in age and mode of formation. Previous authors have named some of these channels; others are named herein.  
 
{|
==Sullivan Channel==
|-
[[Galatia Channel:Sullivan Channel|Sullivan Channel]]
| '''[[Galatia Channel:Sullivan Channel|Sullivan Channel]]'''
 
|-
==Effingham Channel==
| '''[[Galatia Channel:Effingham Channel|Effingham Channel]]'''
[[Galatia Channel:Effingham Channel|Effingham Channel]]
|-
 
| '''[[Galatia Channel:Leslie Cemetery Channel|Leslie Cemetery Channel]]'''
==Leslie Cemetery Channel==
|-
[[Galatia Channel:Leslie Cemetery Channel|Leslie Cemetery Channel]]
| '''[[Galatia Channel:Other Channels|Other Channels]]'''
 
|}
==Other Channels==
Potter (1962, 1963) mapped other channel-form sandstone bodies below the Springfield Coal that do not correspond to interruptions in the coal. These include a series of branching, strongly meandering channels in southern Illinois, largely Franklin, Hamilton, Saline, and Gallatin Counties (Figure 8). Widths are in the range of 0.6 to 1.9 mi (1 to 3 km). Portions appear dendritic with tributaries, but the overall drainage direction is unclear. These likely represent more than one channel; one segment appears to cross the Galatia channel at nearly a right angle. More channels mapped by Potter are in Bond, Clinton, Washington, and Perry Counties of southwestern Illinois. These sinuous features branch and rejoin but do not exhibit (as mapped) an integrated drainage. We have not investigated these channels and will offer no further comments.
 
Friedman (1956, 1960) mapped an area near Terre Haute, Indiana, where the Springfield Coal is split and partly replaced by sandstone and shale. He called this feature the Terre Haute channel. Friedman’s map ([[:File:C605-Figure-38.jpg|Figure 38]]) shows a southwest-trending channel about 1,312.3 ft (400 m) wide, with several short branches joining from the southeast. In one area, the coal divides into a continuous lower bench and an upper bench that thins and pinches out toward the channel axis. In another area, shale layers occur in the coal along a linear trend, although the coal is not cut out. Sandstone is largely confined to the main channel. Maximum clastic thickness is about 39.4 ft (12 m). Harper (1985, p. 19–20) discussed the Terre Haute channel in relation to the Dresser underground coal mine but did not shed further light on the nature of the disturbance. Friedman inferred a dendritic fluvial system that was active during later stages of peat formation. The Terre Haute channel may be similar to the Leslie Cemetery channel, but not enough data are at hand to offer a theory of its origin.
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Latest revision as of 15:13, 14 July 2020

Other Channels Related to the Galatia Channel

Several paleochannels have been mapped that are similar to the Galatia channel in age and mode of formation. Previous authors have named some of these channels; others are named herein.

Sullivan Channel
Effingham Channel
Leslie Cemetery Channel
Other Channels