http://www.heraldandnews.com/articles/2005/06/09/news/top_stories/top3.txt
Mapping project focuses on Basin
June 9, 2005
By LEE JUILLERAT
A state geologist
compiling a map of fault lines in the Klamath
Basin over the next several months will be
roaming across the region collecting rock
samples.
Margi Jenks, who
has spent years in the Klamath Basin doing
geologic mapping, will likely ask private
land-owners for access to certain spots, and is
open to information from local residents that
will help her work.
Jenks will spend
seven months mapping hundreds of square miles
for the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral
Industries.
Geologic mapping in
the Klamath River Basin is being done to support
ongoing groundwater monitoring, said state
Geologist Vicki McConnell.
Through funding
from the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, McConnell
said the department plans to "compile several
years of detailed geologic mapping into a single
map product that can be used by our federal and
state partners and the local land use decision
makers alike."
Jenks, a department
geologist, will lead the Klamath River Basin
efforts by using detailed maps compiled over the
last seven years. Jenks will map areas from the
California border to the Klamath Marsh.
McConnell said the
mapping will support ongoing groundwater
monitoring and modeling efforts by the Oregon
Water Resources Department and the U.S.
Geological Survey's Water Resources Department.
Mapping will center around locating the faults
and layers that control the movement of
groundwater within the basin.
"Our previous work
has shown that the groundwater is strongly
controlled by the faulting in the area," Jenks
said. "To figure out the faulting and the
history of the volcanic and sedimentary rocks in
the Basin, I will be collecting samples of the
lava flows for chemical analysis and for
radiometric dating."
Jenks is interested
in hearing from and working with local
landowners.
"I am interested in
the locations of any fossils that anyone has
found in the basin, particularly fish jaws and
backbone vertebra," she said.
Jenks will also be
knocking on doors and telephoning to ask for
permission to map on private land.
"While most of the
my work will be on Forest Service and other
federally owned ground, I will be asking people
in specific areas for permission to view and
sample the rocks on their land," she said.
"I don't go on
private land if I do not have permission, so I
may be pretty persistent about areas that are of
particular importance to our understanding of
the Basin. In the past I have often been able to
tell people about interesting features on their
land, like extinct volcanoes or ancient
landslides."
Jenks has worked on
a variety of area groundwater projects. In the
summer of 2001 she help to site irrigation wells
for the various Oregon irrigation districts
south of Klamath Falls. She also located test
well drilling sites for the Klamath and Klamath
Hills drainage districts, and was "pretty
successful in identifying productive well
sites."
"Getting the word
out that Margi is working in the area usually
makes it easier for her to get permission from
landowners to map on their land," said James
Roddey, the department's community education
coordinator.
The Oregon
Department of Geology and Mineral Industries is
an independent state agency that has a broad
responsibility in developing a geologic
understanding of natural hazards. Information is
made available to communities and individuals to
help reduce the risks from earthquakes,
tsunamis, landslides, floods and volcanic
eruptions.
For more
information James Roddey, 800 NE Oregon St.,
Portland, OR 97232, (503) 731-4100, extension
242, or by cell phone at (503) 807-8343.
To learn more about
Oregon's geology visit the department's Web site
at www.oregongeology.com. |