Letter to Taylor from Leverett, June 8, 1924
Scope and Contents
The correspondence series includes approximately 1100 letters written between 1892-1939. The majority of the collection are letters between Frank Leverett and Frank Bursley Taylor; they discuss their field work, Monograph 53, other publications and various related problems. There is also other correspondence with other geologists, including T.C. Chamberlin, Grove K. Gilbert, J.W. Goldthwait, H.L. Fairchild, et alia. There is extensive correspondence with the U.S. Geological Survey, the Geological Survey of Canada, and the Michigan Geological Survey. The primary subject of this series is the surficial glacial geology of the midwestern U.S. and Canada. Leverett & Taylor's work was essential for understanding how the Great Lakes were formed as the Pleistocene glaciers advanced and retreated from the midwestern states. The letters describe the 30 year process of gathering data, mapping the data and constructing the picture of glacial processes during the last Ice Age.
Dates
- Creation: June 8, 1924
Conditions Governing Access
The collection is open for research.
Conditions Governing Access
The material is stored offsite in Remote Storage. Please contact Special Collections 3 working days in advance if you wish to use it.
Extent
From the Collection: 1 Linear Feet
Language of Materials
English
General
I just finished work in southern IN and will go to Cincinnati this evening. Malott & Breeze worked with me along the ice boundary from Morgan Co. to the Ohio River at Jeffersonville. We found drift further out than we anticipated. The border runs SE from Needmore past Nashville, and then runs S passing on E side of Weed Patch Hill and E of Story in Brown Co and W of Freetown in Jackson Co., and then continues S to Millport. A mile S of Millport there is a heavy till deposit under a gravel outwash 200' above the river or 700' AT. The border then follows the Knobstone escarpment a mile S of Bennettsville and makes a loop in the lowland nearly down to Jeffersonville. I think this drift is Illinoian, although some pebbles are weathered as badly as Kansan. My next address is Waverly, OH, for all of next week.
Repository Details
Part of the Stephen O. Murray and Keelung Hong Special Collections Repository