GeMS validation of FRIEN2025.1.gdb

File written by GeMS_ValidateDatabase.py, version of 02/19/2025
Tue Dec 30 14:53:52 2025
Runtime parameters
Database path: C:\Users\WVINCETT\Desktop\MD_2022_Friendsville2025.1_1-2-submittal\MD_2022_Friendsville2025.1_1-2\MD_2022_Friendsville2025.1_1-2-database\FRIEN2025.1.gdb
Output directory: C:\Users\WVINCETT\Desktop\MD_2022_Friendsville2025.1_1-2-submittal
Metadata file: None
Check embedded metadata: False
Skip topology check: False
Refresh GeoMaterialDict: False
Delete extra rows in Glossary and DataSources: False
Compact GDB: True

This database is LEVEL 3 COMPLIANT.

Check Metadata option was skipped. Be sure to have prepared valid metadata and check this option to produce a complete report.
This file should be accompanied by FRIEN2025.1.gdb-ValidationErrors.html and a metadata summary from mp in the same directory.

If this database will be submitted to the NGMDB, it also needs to be accompanied by a reviewed Geologic Names report that includes identification of any suggested modifications to Geolex. Use the Geologic Names Check tool to generate that report or provide other documentation of a review.

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Contents

Compliance Criteria
Warnings
Content not specified in GeMS schema
Occurrence of MapUnits in DMU, feature datasets, or geopackage tables
Contents of Nonspatial Tables
DataSources
DescriptionOfMapUnits
Glossary
Database Inventory

Compliance Criteria

LEVEL 1

Criteria for a LEVEL 1 GeMS database are: Databases with a variety of schema may meet these criteria. This script cannot confirm LEVEL 1 compliance.

LEVEL 2--MINIMALLY COMPLIANT

A LEVEL 2 GeMS database is accompanied by a peer-reviewed Geologic Names report, including identification of suggested modifications to Geolex, and meets the following criteria:
2.1 Has required elements: nonspatial tables DataSources, DescriptionOfMapUnits, GeoMaterialDict; feature dataset GeologicMap with feature classes ContactsAndFaults and MapUnitPolys PASS
2.2 Required fields within required elements are present and correctly defined PASS
2.3 All MapUnitPolys and ContactsAndFaults based feature classes obey Level 2 topology rules: no internal gaps or overlaps in MapUnitPolys, boundaries of MapUnitPolys are covered by ContactsAndFaults PASS
2.4 All map units in MapUnitPolys have entries in DescriptionOfMapUnits table PASS
2.5 No duplicate MapUnit values in DescriptionOfMapUnit table PASS
2.6 Certain field values within required elements have entries in Glossary table PASS
2.7 No duplicate Term values in Glossary table PASS
2.8 All xxxSourceID values in required elements have entries in DataSources table PASS
2.9 No duplicate DataSources_ID values in DataSources table PASS

LEVEL 3--FULLY COMPLIANT

A LEVEL 3 GeMS database meets these additional criteria:
3.1 Table and field definitions beyond Level 2 conform to GeMS schema PASS
3.2 All MapUnitPolys and ContactsAndFaults based feature classes obey Level 3 topology rules: No ContactsAndFaults overlaps, self-overlaps, or self-intersections. PASS
3.3 No missing required values PASS
3.4 No missing terms in Glossary PASS
3.5 No unnecessary terms in Glossary PASS
3.6 No missing sources in DataSources PASS
3.7 No unnecessary sources in DataSources PASS
3.8 No map units without entries in DescriptionOfMapUnits PASS
3.9 No unnecessary map units in DescriptionOfMapUnits PASS
3.10 HierarchyKey values in DescriptionOfMapUnits are unique and well formed PASS
3.11 All values of GeoMaterial are defined in GeoMaterialDict. GeoMaterialDict is as specified in the GeMS standard PASS
3.12 No duplicate _ID values PASS
3.13 No zero-length, whitespace-only, or bad null values PASS

Warnings

There are 0 warnings

Content not specified in GeMS schema

Some of the extensions to the GeMS schema identified here may be necessary to capture geologic content and are entirely appropriate. Please document these extensions in metadata for the database, any accompanying README file, and (if applicable) any transmittal letter that accompanies the dataset. Other extensions may be intermediate datasets, fields, or files that should be deleted before distribution of the database.

Fields


OrientationPoints_Display, FieldID
OrientationPoints_Display, OrientationPoints_AllID
OrientationPoints_All, FieldID
OrientationPoints_All, OrientationPoints_DisplayID

Tables


MapOutline

Occurrence of MapUnit in DMU, feature datasets, or geopackage tables

MapUnit DescriptionOfMapUnits GeologicMap
Mg X X
Pcg X X
MDr X X
Qps X X
Pa X X
Pp X X
Qal X X
Qt X X
Mmc X X
Pcc X X
Dh X X
Qc X X
Mp X X

Contents of Nonspatial Tables

DataSources

OBJECTIDSourceNotesURLDataSources_ID
4Neuendorf et al., eds., 2011modified from Neuendorf, K.K.E., Mehl Jr., J.P., and Jackson, J.A., eds. 2011. Glossary of Geology (Fifth Edition, Revised). Alexandria, VA. American Geological Institute. 783 p.https://www.americangeosciences.org/pubs/glossaryAGI_2011
13Baker-Wibberly and Associates, Inc., 1973Baker-Wibberly and Associates, Inc., 1973. Mine abatement measures for the Northern Youghiogheny River Complex, unpublished report to the Maryland Geological Survey, 103 p.NoneBWA_1973
3FGDC, 2006Federal Geographic Data Committee [prepared for the Federal Geographic Data Committee by the U.S. Geological Survey], 2006, FGDC Digital Cartographic Standard for Geologic Map Symbolization: Reston, Va., Federal Geographic Data Committee Document Number FGDC-STD-013-2006, 290 p., 2 plates.https://ngmdb.usgs.gov/fgdc_gds/geolsymstd.phpFGDC-STD-013-2006
2definitions copied from GeMS, 2020U.S. Geological Survey National Cooperative Geologic Mapping Program, 2020, GeMS (Geologic Map Schema)—A standard format for the digital publication of geologic maps: U.S. Geological Survey Techniques and Methods, book 11, chap. B10, 74 p., https://doi.org//10.3133/tm11B10.https://pubs.usgs.gov/publication/tm11B10GeMS_2020
15MD iMAP, County BoundaryMaryland State, MD iMAP Data Catalog (DoIT), Maryland Political Boundaries - County Boundary, publ. 2015-07, accessed 2024-02.https://mdgeodata.md.gov/imap/rest/services/Boundaries/MD_PoliticalBoundaries/FeatureServer/1IMAP_PolB_CB_2015
16Brezinski, D.K., 1988Brezinski, D.K., 1988. Geologic Map of the Avilton and Frostburg Quadrangles, Maryland. Maryland Geological Survey, Geologic Map, scale 1:24,000.http://www.mgs.md.gov/output/maps/quadgeo/AVILT_FROST_1988_GEO.jpgMGS_AVILT_FROST1988_GEO
12Brezinski, D.K., field observationsfield observations and interpretations by David K. Brezinski of the Maryland Geological SurveyNoneMGS_DKB
1Kavage Adams, R., and Brezinski, D.K., 2025this reporthttp://www.mgs.md.gov/publications/maps.htmlMGS_FRIEN2025.1
8Brezinski, D.K., 1989Brezinski, D.K., 1989. The Mississippian System in Maryland. Maryland Geological Survey, Report of Investigations No. 52, 75 p.http://www.mgs.md.gov/reports/RI_52.pdfMGS_RI_52
11Kavage Adams, R., field observationsfield observations and interpretations by Rebecca Kavage Adams of the Maryland Geological SurveyNoneMGS_RKA
17Swartz, C.K., and Baker, W.A., 1922Swartz, C.K., and Baker, W.A., 1922. The coal formations and mines of Maryland, in Second Report on the coals of Maryland: Maryland Geological Survey, v. 11, pt. 1, 296 p.https://www.msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/speccol/sc6000/sc6046/000000/000001/000000/000011/pdf/msa_sc6046_1_11.pdfMGS_Vol_11_1
5National Hydrography DatasetU.S. Geological Survey, 2020, National Hydrography Dataset (NHD), accessed October 2023 at https://www.usgs.gov/national-hydrography/national-hydrography-datasethttps://www.usgs.gov/national-hydrography/national-hydrography-datasetNHD_2020
14Jacobsen, E.F., and Lyons, P.C., 1985Jacobsen, E.F., and Lyons, P.C., 1985. Coal geology of the lower Youghiogheny coal field, Garrett County, Maryland: U.S. Geological Survey Coal Map 101, scale 1:24,000.https://pubs.usgs.gov/coal/101/plate-1.pdfUSGS_CM101_1985

DescriptionOfMapUnits

OBJECTIDMapUnitNameFullNameAgeDescriptionHierarchyKeyParagraphStyleLabelSymbolAreaFillRGBAreaFillPatternDescriptionDescriptionSourceIDGeoMaterialGeoMaterialConfidenceDescriptionOfMapUnits_ID
2QalAlluviumAlluviumQuaternaryUnconsolidated clay, sand, silt, pebbles, cobbles and boulders. Olive gray to medium dark gray, weathering moderate brown. Finer alluvium such as sand, silt and gravel underlies many of the lower gradient streams, while steeper streams are frequently floored by bedrock or locally derived sandstone cobbles and boulders. Valley floors are narrow in the steep terrain of resistant sandstones (Pottsville Formation) and coarse colluvium is transitional with alluvium. Floodplains develop sinuosity on the less resistant strata of the Allegheny Formation and Conemaugh Group. Total thickness ranges from a thin veneer to 15 feet (5 m).01-01DMU Unit 1Qal40255,255,179NoneMGS_FRIEN2025.1Alluvial sedimentHighDMU01
3QcColluviumColluviumQuaternaryUnconsolidated cobbles, boulders and large blocks of sandstone and conglomerate. Light olive gray to yellowish gray. Typically derived from massive Pottsville and Allegheny Formation sandstones that were transported by gravity, debris flow, and freeze-thaw processes. Abundant on steeper slopes adjacent to the Youghiogheny River and South Branch Bear Creek. Includes boulder streams and boulder fields. Thickness is estimated at 3 to 50 feet (1-15 m).01-02DMU Unit 1Qc62255,222,128NoneMGS_FRIEN2025.1Colluvium and other widespread mass-movement sedimentHighDMU02
4QpsPeatland and swamp depositsPeatland and swamp depositsQuaternaryPeat, clay and sandy clay. Beneath modern peat is clay and sandy clay ranging in color from light brown to brown with plant debris and wood fragments. Deposits are located west of the Youghiogheny River south of the town of Friendsville. Total thickness estimated at 10 feet (3 m).01-03DMU Unit 1Qps120235,255,222NoneMGS_FRIEN2025.1Peat and muckHighDMU03
5QtTerrace depositsTerrace depositsQuaternaryVery poorly sorted clay, sand, pebbles, gravel and boulders from 55 to 80 feet (17-25 m) above the Youghiogheny River. Clasts are moderately well rounded to well rounded. Thickness is estimated at 10 feet (3 m).01-04DMU Unit 1Qt71255,235,102NoneMGS_FRIEN2025.1Alluvial sedimentHighDMU04
6NoneConemaugh GroupConemaugh GroupNoneNone02DMU-Heading1NoneNoneNoneNoneNoneNoneNoneDMU05
7PccCasselman FormationConemaugh Group, Casselman FormationPennsylvanianShale, sandstone, siltstone, limestone and coal. Shale is predominantly medium to dark gray and found in association with coal and clay layers. Sandstone is light olive gray and thin- to thick-bedded with occasional cross bedding. Important coals include: Barton (b) and Wellersburg (w) (Lower Clarysville coal of Jacobsen and Lyons, 1985). Marker sandstone units include: the Grafton Sandstone above the Ames marine horizon and the Morgantown Sandstone above the Barton coal bed. The base of the formation is mapped at the top of the Ames marine interval. The top is not present in the Friendsville Quadrangle; thickness is 100-150 feet (30-45 m).02-01DMU Unit 1*cc312204,222,235NoneMGS_FRIEN2025.1|USGS_CM101_1985Sandstone and mudstoneHighDMU06
8PcgGlenshaw FormationConemaugh Group, Glenshaw FormationPennsylvanianShale, sandstone, siltstone, limestone, coal and redbeds. Shale is medium gray to black, thinly bedded, fissile, typically found in association with coal and clay layers. Coarse-grained olive gray sandstones weather yellowish brown with black- and orange-stained, pitted surfaces. Some tabular cross bedding and massive conglomeratic layers present. Important coals include: Brush Creek (bc), Lower Bakerstown (lb) and Ames (a) (Harlem coal of Jacobsen and Lyons, 1985). Marker sandstone units include: the Upper Mahoning Sandstone above the Upper Freeport coal bed, the Buffalo Sandstone above the Brush Creek coal bed, and the Saltsburg Sandstone above the Lower Bakerstown coal bed. Marine horizons are present above the Brush Creek and Ames coal beds and limestone (Myersdale Limestone of Jacobsen and Lyons, 1985) was quarried on the western edge of the Friendsville Quadrangle. The base of the formation is placed at the top of the Upper Freeport Coal. Total thickness is 350-425 feet (100-125 m).02-02DMU Unit 1*cg421179,235,222NoneMGS_FRIEN2025.1|USGS_CM101_1985Sandstone and mudstoneHighDMU07
9PaAllegheny FormationAllegheny FormationPennsylvanianSandstone, conglomerate, shale, coal and underclay. Interbedded sandstone and conglomerate intervals are very light to medium light gray, thick-bedded to massive with white quartz pebbles. Tabular cross bedding and iron staining are common and iron banding is occasionally present. Erosional channel bases have abundant plant fossils, black to brown iron staining, and stylolites. Shale is medium gray to black, thinly bedded, fissile, typically found in contact with coal and clay layers, and capped by resistant sandstone layers. Two minable coals are mapped (from top): Upper Freeport (uf) and Upper Kittanning (uk). The Upper Freeport is the most persistent and commonly mined coal bed in the Youghiogheny basin. The base is mapped on the top of the Homewood Sandstone. Total thickness is 200-250 feet (60-75 m).03DMU Unit 1*a521153,235,222NoneMGS_FRIEN2025.1Mostly sandstoneHighDMU08
10PpPottsville FormationPottsville FormationPennsylvanianSandstone and conglomerate, with minor shale, coal underclay. Sandstone and conglomerate are light olive gray and thin-bedded to massive. Tabular cross bedding, erosional bases, and fossil plant fragments are common. The Homewood Sandstone, present at the top of the formation, forms ledges and colluvial slopes in the southern portion of the Friendsville Quadrangle in South Branch Bear Creek and the Youghiogheny River and largely covers underlying lithologies. No mineable coals are mapped in the Friendsville Quadrangle. The Pottsville Formation rests unconformably on the Mauch Chunk Formation. The base is mapped on the disappearance of olive green sandstone and appearance of red and green shale or paleosol. Total thickness is 150-200 feet (45-60 m).04DMU Unit 1*p733102,204,204NoneMGS_FRIEN2025.1Mostly sandstoneHighDMU09
11MmcMauch Chunk FormationMauch Chunk FormationMississippianShale, siltstone, sandstone and limestone. Shale is reddish gray, olive green, thin-bedded and fissile with root casts, and weathers easily to reddish gray soil. Siltstone and sandstone are thin- to medium-bedded, light olive gray, argillaceous, micaceous, and frequently cross bedded in multi-stacked sandstone layers that outcrop as small ridges on hillsides and bedrock steps in streams. Thin fossiliferous shales and limestones of the Reynolds Member occur near the base of the formation. The base of the formation is mapped in red and green shale above the Wymps Gap Member of the Greenbrier Formation. The only exposure is in the South Branch Bear Creek valley. Total thickness is 450 feet (150 m).05DMU Unit 1Mmc603128,204,255NoneMGS_FRIEN2025.1Sandstone and mudstoneHighDMU10
12MgGreenbrier FormationGreenbrier FormationMississippianLimestone, shale, siltstone and sandstone. Four members are recognized but not mapped (Brezinski, 1989). The basal Loyalhanna Member is a reddish gray to light gray, arenaceous limestone with large-scale cross bedding accentuated by weathering. It is 50 feet (13 m) thick. The overlying Deer Valley Member is a light olive gray, massive, crystalline limestone with white to pink calcite veins and slickensides. It weathers to moderate yellowish brown and thin siltstone beds occur every 4-6 inches (10-15 cm). It is 15 feet (5 m) thick. The Savage Dam Member overlies the Deer Valley Member and is mostly reddish gray, grayish green, thin-bedded siltstone and variegated shale with mudcracks and light gray to white fine-grained sandstone. Sandstone layers are pale yellowish brown to yellowish gray, thick to massive, cross bedded, and calcareous. The member is 75 feet (25 m) thick. The uppermost unit of the Greenbrier Formation is the Wymps Gap Member, which is light olive gray to medium dark gray, shaly to argillaceous limestone with abundant brachiopod, bryzoan, and crinoid fossils. Bedding is thin to massive, ripple laminated, and sometimes nodular. A distinct fetid odor emerges upon breakage of some units and white calcite slickensides are present. The Wymps Gap Member is 45 feet (14 m) thick. The base of the formation is mapped at the base of the Loyalhanna Member. This unit is found in small historic quarries above South Branch Bear Creek. The Wymps Gap Member was quarried historically for lime on the east side of South Branch Bear Creek. Total thickness is 185 feet (56 m).06DMU Unit 1Mg501153,235,255NoneMGS_FRIEN2025.1LimestoneHighDMU11
13MpPurslane FormationPurslane FormationMississippianSandstone and conglomerate. Sandstone is predominant in the upper portion of the formation and is light olive gray, thin- to medium-bedded, flaggy, and weathers moderate brown. Some layers are cross bedded with erosional bases and shale rip-up clasts. The base of the formation is a massive yellowish gray to very pale orange conglomerate with rounded clear to white quartz pebbles ranging from 0.3-2 inches (0.5-5 cm). Occasional white, friable beds are present. The base of the formation is mapped below this massive conglomerate, which forms ledges and conglomerate block fields. The Purslane Formation appears in the southeast section of the quadrangle. Total thickness is 250-300 feet (75-90 m).07DMU Unit 1Mp301204,235,255NoneMGS_FRIEN2025.1Mostly sandstoneHighDMU12
14MDrRockwell FormationRockwell FormationDevonian-MississippianShale, siltstone and sandstone. Siltstone and sandstone are olive green to yellowish gray, thin- to thick-bedded, cross bedded and burrowed. Shale is olive gray to black and thin-bedded with brachiopods, indeterminate bivalves and coaly plant fragments. The base of the Rockwell Formation is mapped where the tan bioturbated sandstones of the Rockwell Formation become prevalent over red shales of the Hampshire Formation. Equivalent to lower portion of the Price Formation in West Virginia. Total thickness is 150-200 feet (45-65 m).08DMU Unit 1MDr614128,179,235NoneMGS_FRIEN2025.1Sandstone and mudstoneHighDMU13
15DhHampshire FormationHampshire FormationDevonianShale, siltstone and sandstone. Shale is reddish gray, greenish gray, thin-bedded, and hackly with root casts. Siltstone and sandstone are olive green and reddish gray, cross bedded, and blocky. Where covered, the Hampshire Formation is mapped on the presence of reddish gray soil. The base is not present in the Friendsville Quadrangle. Equivalent to the Hampshire Group in West Virginia. Thickness exposed in the Friendsville Quadrangle is 50-100 feet (15-30 m).09DMU Unit 1Dh414179,179,235NoneMGS_FRIEN2025.1Sandstone and mudstoneHighDMU14

Glossary

OBJECTIDTermDefinitionDefinitionSourceIDGlossary_ID
9beddingFormed, arranged, or deposited in layers or beds, or made up of or occurring in the form of beds; esp. said of a layered sedimentary rock, deposit, or formation. The term has also been applied to nonsedimentary material that exhibits depositional layering, such as the "bedded deposits" of volcanic tuff alternating with lava in the mantle of a stratovolcano.AGI_2011GLID08
1certainIdentity of a feature can be determined using relevant observations and scientific judgment; therefore, one can be reasonably confident in the credibility of this interpretation.FGDC-STD-013-2006GLID01
16coalAn outcrop or trace of a coal bed or stratum.MGS_FRIEN2025.1GLID14
8contactA plane or irregular surface between two different types or ages of rock, sediment or other geologic and stratigraphic units.AGI_2011GLID07
7cross sectionA plane or polyline along which a diagram is drawn showing the transected subsurface and topographic features and geology; specifically a vertical section drawn at right angles to the longer axis of a geologic feature.AGI_2011GLID06
6DMU-Heading1Group style, bolded title, 11pt Times New Roman font. Units mapped at the surface and in the subsurface.MGS_FRIEN2025.1GLID05
5DMU Unit 1Formation style, bolded title, 11pt Times New Roman font. Units mapped at the surface and in the subsurface.MGS_FRIEN2025.1GLID04
10faultA discrete surface or zone of discrete surfaces separating two rock masses across which one mass has slid past the other.AGI_2011GLID09
13fold axisA curve or bend of a planar structure such as rock strata, bedding planes, foliation, or cleavage. A fold is usually a product of deformation, although its definition is descriptive and not genetic and may include primary structures.AGI_2011GLID12
3HighThe selected term in the GeoMaterial field (and its definition) adequately characterizes the overall lithologic nature of rocks and (or) sediments in the map unit.GeMS_2020GLID03
11jointA planar fracture, crack, or parting in a rock, without shear displacement.AGI_2011GLID10
12neatlineMap OutlineMGS_FRIEN2025.1GLID11
2questionableIdentity of a feature cannot be determined using relevant observations and scientific judgment; therefore, one cannot be reasonably confident in the credibility of this interpretation. For example, IdentityConfidence = questionable is appropriate when a geologist reasons "I can see some kind of planar feature that separates map units in this outcrop, but I cannot be certain if it is a contact or a fault."FGDC-STD-013-2006GLID02
17recreational GPSField-based method to collect data observations. Collected using tablet and usually 30 ft accuracy confidence.MGS_FRIEN2025.1GLID15
18State boundaryState of Maryland boundary line.MGS_FRIEN2025.1|IMAP_PolB_CB_2015GLID16
14waterPerrenial natural or manmade areas of surface water of adequate size to map, including streams, rivers, lakes, impoundments, etc.MGS_FRIEN2025.1|NHD_2020GLID13

Database Inventory

This summary of database content is provided as a convenience to GIS analysts, reviewers, and others. It is not part of the GeMS compliance criteria.

DataSources, nonspatial table, 13 rows
DescriptionOfMapUnits, nonspatial table, 14 rows
GeoMaterialDict, nonspatial table, 101 rows
Glossary, nonspatial table, 16 rows
GeologicMap, feature dataset
CartographicLines, simple polyline feature class, 1 rows
MapUnitPolys, simple polygon feature class, 43 rows
MapUnitOverlayPolys, simple polygon feature class, 54 rows
ContactsAndFaults, simple polyline feature class, 156 rows
GeologicLines, simple polyline feature class, 181 rows
Stations, simple point feature class, 609 rows
OrientationPoints_Display, simple point feature class, 269 rows
OrientationPoints_All, simple point feature class, 934 rows
OverlayPolys, simple polygon feature class, 1 rows
MapOutline, simple polyline feature class, 1 rows