I spoke with Andy Snyder from the U.S. Geological Survey about the phenomenon.
The area in question was roughly defined in 2010 by the U.S. Geological Survey.
Wrong: it turns out the first geological map produced anywhere was made in the United States in 1809 by William Maclure.
Two years—and half a dozen deep-sea expeditions later—the geological world is abuzz.
The find led to the discovery of other similar lakes and floods, but was initially disbelieved because it was “geological heresy.”
The development of vertebrates was slow, and they were the last to appear on the stage of geological history.
According to geological classification, these rocks belong to the Archæan system.
Nothing inanimate has interested him more than fossils and geological specimens.
It may be asked, Is there, then, no place in the geological record even for theistic evolution?
Facts are often wanted without art, as in a geological diagram; and art often without facts, as in a Turkey carpet.