4 58 25 52 43 26 80 75 76 80 80 60 75 80 72 68 38 55 83 85 73 76 80 74 75 81 76 68 85 75 55 64 80 80 84 65 82 70 70 80 84 60 85 70 86 54 85 78 78 43 60 56 65 80 80 78 60 85 33 40 85 43 40 72 65 73 70 80 60 85 60 85 65 38 85 75 85 42 80 72 32 55 79 78 80 78 74 81 83 68 75 84 74 87 70 74 80 68 45 36 80 75 71 78 49 62 69 67 52 52 50 41 67 48 50 78 82 85 80 52 85 88 63 53 72 68 80 85 58 85 45 65 32 59 50 75 85 70 54 35 45 75 30 85 60 82 74 68 82 58 62 80 75 69 31 22 60 85 64 65 80 85 32 45 50 70 50 84 65 65 75 82 72 75 85 42 24 87 72 60 75 25 30 85 49 18 85 76 60 55 85 70 85 87 82 80 70 55 85 75 85 70 48 62 82 82 80 28 80 84 85 73 55 85 74 85 80 80 25 36 28 85 85 80 70 11 68 73 83 36 38 60 76 85 84 80 80 85 70 76 80 86 80 44 80 80 77 31 84 85 72 78 79 80 78 67 79 82 70 85 84 77 77 73 78 30 64 34 60 85 78 80 70 48 75 40 60 51 26 50 60 82 70 68 75 75 86 46 87 86 76 87 82 47 80 65 80 69 74 10 65 74 74 53 53 70 85 80 85 64 85 50 65 64 82 73 75 55 83 76 85 80 60 85 86 80 84 68 85 34 77 45 80 24 85 75 78 20 85 65 80 80 85 78 52 40 85 75 78 85 77 81 38 74 85 41 85 68 48 72 63 82 72 38 23 10 80 40 78 23 74 85 62 62 30 76 85 35 16 28 62 72 83 36 40 85 45 86 50 70 60 75 85 80 68 85 55 56 65 85 75 80 47 42 80 38 40 40 70 52 83 79 60 27 85 86 65 74 85 56 51 82 78 51 86 62 85 80 85 75 86 80 63 83 84 76 63 87 10 57 60 76 59 86 61 80 82 80 85 5 46 74 75 86 64 55 74 68 58 52 79 80 83 83 65 78 77 65 82 57 89 80 49 21 21 83 56 84 66 82 71 72 70 82 60 58 82 85 85 30 80 78 42 80 82 72 75 85 65 65 58 76 88 79 47 83 78 86 78 81 80 41 65 73 80 80 83 72 39 73 78 76 77 31 55 73 65 87 40 85 20 23 77 47 80 82 75 71 85 78 75 87 35 70 70 88 86 84 72 80 44 84 85 72 57 60 82 21 67 42 70 76 79 75 70 50 73 82 56 64 70 76 50 85 86 63 80 75 83 72 58 76 4 85 52 50 70 70 87 65 72 85 12 65 70 80 60 70 68 52 42 85 82 85 86 60 64 42 53 55 70 62 72 67 75 40 76 82 43 82 69 50 35 61 84 70 47 85 82 58 78 78 38 49 87 73 84 75 80 75 67 18 85 25 70 78 70 80 80 70 80 18 70 86 72 15 88 87 84 79 78 85 72 80 89 85 72 45 79 87 55 12 72 82 64 79 30 80 33 77 85 85 80 80 64 71 88 75 14 85 82 80 38 77 78 65 20 58 22 82 68 78 78 70 59 10 50 72 78 75 76 77 65 76 65 50 50 85 48 86 78 60 50 86 82 39 85 55 78 63 67 68 64 88 61 50 88 65 72 73 65 85 73 88 80 85 76 81 85 69 75 76 77 80 84 76 87 67 75 85 68 59 58 21 60 80 83 50 80 88 75 77 80 70 83 64 64 10 48 73 80 86 70 80 50 70 78 80 77 64 68 85 85 87 85 84 85 85 86 80 82 85 85 85 85 76 85 70 85 85 80 85 71 68 82 78 80 70 86 74 80 78 84 60 80 84 85 75 80 78 70 85 86 80 87 70 85 85 50 75 85 85 75 62 63 63 80 67 85 80 87 85 83 85 85 85 60 76 85 78 87 85 87 75 70 80 73 80 80 85 68 80 80 80 85 85 86 85 85 80 85 80 72 85 83 83 80 85 75 85 70 85 85 80 85 88 60 85 80 85 85 80 85 86 80 80 80 80 86 85 80 85 85 83 75 80 82 80 85 85 78 86 85 82 85 70 87 80 85 81 80 85 82 72 80 80 85 78 80 9 76 84 86 80 87 1 79 88 80 85 72 85 83 86 86 85 85 89 82 75 88 85 49 88 78 36 85 85 80 85 54 73 75 80 11 80 70 75 85 81 85 70 88 85 70 85 85 83 80 82 80 85 70 85 76 79 80 86 82 86 80 66 85 78 80 70 85 85 85 85 85 82 88 85 86 76 86 80 75 85 75 78 85 88 85 82 80 78 87 72 65 84 81 78 83 83 84 82 87 77 88 88 85 77 85 80 41 76 77 76 74 53 66 65 85 69 48 70 54 78 60 75 73 72 85 76 68 84 85 85 75 80 76 70 80 85 67 75 52 70 58 65 78 85 78 80 86 85 82 73 75 80 78 80 85 40 75 85 74 85 85 80 85 62 76 88 85 75 77 78 79 78 76 85 72 85 80 82 80 80 75 72 85 85 80 75 85 45 80 7 80 80 85 70 80 75 84 75 82 80 85 86 84 86 5 84 78 55 74 1 82 78 58 68 1 0 80 85 85 85 85 82 41 85 Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal Qal PPrgd PPrgj PPfg ZPhbg PPwg PPrgfm PPfg ZPgg ZPgg PPg PPg PPrgfm ZPbms PPrgk PPg ZPbms PPg PPg PPg PPg ZPbms PPrgk PPg PPg PPg ZPbms ZPhbg ZPbms ZPbms ZPbms PPgd ZPbms ZPhbg PPg ZPbms ZPhbg ZPhbg ZPhbg PPg ZPhbg ZPbms PPgd ZPhbg ZPbms ZPhbg ZPum ZPum ZPum PPrgj PPrgj PPrgd PPrgd PPrgd PPrgd PPrgd PPwg PPwg PPwg ZPhbg ZPhbg ZPhbg ZPhbg ZPgg ZPgg PPfg PPrgfm PPfg ZPbms Jd2 Jd2 65 84 80 77 70 54 45 PPg 78 22' 30" 36 22' 30" 78 15' 36 15' 78 15' 36 22' 30" 78 22' 30" 36 15' FA U L T (? ) L A K E G O RD O N A' qrx qrx qrx qrx qrx Jd Jd Jd A A A' sea level -2800' sea level -2800' Lake Gordon fault zone Stewart Farm Rd. S. Cokesbury Rd. Stewart Rd. Jones Chapel Rd. Shephard Rd. Satterwhite Point Rd. Anderson Cr. US 1 Business/US 158 US 1 Bypass Brookston Rd. Warrenton Rd. Daniel Harris Rd. I 85 Jd2 PPg PPwg PPwg ZPgg ZPgg PPfg ZPbms ZPhbg ZPhbg PPrgfm measurements in feet - no vertical exaggeration Produced by the United States Geological Survey. Altered by the North Carolina Geological Survey for use with map. By Edward F. Stoddard and Randy Bechtel 2020 Digital representation by Michael A. Medina and Philip J. Bradley Bedrock Geologic Map of the Vicksboro 7.5-minute Quadrangle, Open File Report 2020-02 North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality Energy, Mineral and Land Resources Brian L. Wrenn, Division Director Kenneth B. Taylor, State Geologist North Carolina Geological Survey Open File Report 2020-02 This is an Open File Map. It has been reviewed internally for conformity with North Carolina Geological Survey mapping standards and with the North American Stratigraphic Code. Further revisions or corrections to this Open File map may occur. This geologic map was funded in part by the USGS National Cooperative Geologic Mapping Program under StateMap award numbers G16AC00288, 2016; G17AC00264, 2017; G18AC00205, 2018; and G19AC00235, 2019. This map and explanatory information is submitted for publication with the understanding that the United States Government is authorized to reproduce and distribute reprints for governmental use. The views and conclusions contained in this document are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as necessarily representing the official policies, either expressed or implied, of the U.S. Government. We are thankful for Jim Chapman, Tyler Clark, Brandon Peach, Aaron Rice, Andy Wales, and Nathan Welch, who assisted with fieldwork. We also thank Phil Bradley and Aaron Rice for assistance with office work and logistics. Discussions concerning the geology of the region with Aaron Rice, Brandon Peach, Jack Nolan, Phil Bradley, Mark Carter, Robby Morrow, Patrick Finnerty and Dave Blake were invaluable. Thanks also to Steve Stadelman, who introduced us to the area and has independently undertaken a study of surficial deposits in the region. In addition, we thank all the landowners who graciously allowed access to their property, especially Herman Collier and the folks at the North Carolina Motorsports Park. Structural Geology Algorithms: Vectors and Tensors: Cambridge, England, Cambridge University Press, 289 pp. Bedrock geologic map of the Henderson 7.5-minute quadrangle, Vance County, North Carolina: North Carolina Geological Survey Open-File Report 2016-17, scale 1:24,000, in color. Spherical projections with OSXStereonet: Computers and Geosciences, v. 51, no. 0, p. 193 - 205, doi: 10.1016 j.cageo.2012.07.021. Stratigraphy of the northeastern North Carolina Piedmont: Southeastern Geology, v. 25, p. 159-183. Tectonic evolution of the easternmost Piedmont, North Carolina: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 96, p. 362-380. Status of geologic mapping and LA-ICP-MS U-Pb zircon geochronology from the Raleigh terrane in the North Carolina eastern Piedmont: Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, v. 51, No. 3. The Carolina Zone: Overview of Neoproterozoic to Early Paleozoic peri-Gondwanan terranes along the eastern flank of the southern Appalachians: Earth Science Reviews, v. 57, p. 299-339. Geologic map of Region K: North Carolina Department of Natural Resources and Community Development, Geological Survey Section, Open File Map NCGS 80-2 [scale 1:100,000]. Structure of easternmost North Carolina Piedmont: Southeastern Geology, v. 9, p. 117-131. Geologic map of the Bracey 7.5-minute quadrangle, Mecklenburg County, Virginia, and Warren County, North Carolina: U.S. Geological Survey, Miscellaneous Field Studies Map MF-2285, scale 1:24,000. Geologic map of the South Hill SE 7.5-minute quadrangle, Mecklenburg and Brunswick Counties, Virginia, and Warren County, North Carolina: U.S. Geological Survey, Miscellaneous Field Studies Map MF-2286, scale 1:24,000. Geologic map of the Gasburg 7.5-minute quadrangle, Brunswick County, Virginia, and Warren, Northampton, and Halifax Counties, North Carolina: U.S. Geological Survey, Miscellaneous Field Studies Map MF-2287, scale 1:24,000. Geologic map of the Valentines 7.5-minute quadrangle, Brunswick and Greensville Counties, Virginia, and Northampton, and Halifax Counties, North Carolina: U.S. Geological Survey, Miscellaneous Field Studies Map MF-2288, scale 1:24,000. Nature of the Rolesville Batholith, North Carolina, in Stoddard, E.F. and Blake, D.E., eds., Geology and Field Trip Guide, Western Flank of the Raleigh Metamorphic Belt, North Carolina, Carolina Geological Society Guidebook for 1994 Annual Meeting, p. 57-62. Bedrock geologic map of the Ingleside 7.5-minute quadrangle, Franklin and Vance Counties, North Carolina: North Carolina Geological Survey Open-File Report 2010- 05, scale 1:24,000, in color. Bedrock geologic map of the Middleburg 7.5-minute quadrangle, Vance and Warren Counties, North Carolina: North Carolina Geological Survey Open-File Report 2016-04, scale 1:24,000, in color. Neoproterozoic- Mid Paleozoic Mid to Late Paleozoic Mesozoic Quaternary metamorphosed sedimentary and igneous rocks (stratigraphic relations uncertain) qrx Jd2 PPrgfm PPrgj PPgd Jd Qal PPg PPfg PPrgk ZPgg PPwg ZPum PPrgd ZPhbg ZPbms This geologic map was funded in part by the USGS National Cooperative Geologic Mapping Program Hillshade derived from a 20 foot LiDAR digital elevation model. Red lines show paths of field traverses. All roads traversed by car. Strike and dip of crenulation cleavage Strike and dip of inclined undifferentiated shear strain foliation (multiple observations at one location) Strike and dip of inclined regional foliation Strike of vertical regional foliation Strike and dip of inclined regional foliation (multiple observations at one location) Strike of vertical regional foliation (multiple observations at one location) 77 70 32 25 64 18 Strike and dip of inclined dike Strike and dip of inclined dike (multiple observations at one location) Strike of vertical dike (multiple observations at one location) Strike and dip of gneissic layering Strike of vertical gneissic layering Strike and dip of gneissic layering (multiple observations at one location) Strike of vertical gneissic layering (multiple observations at one location) 60 77 Strike of vertical dike 52 70 65 63 Strike and dip of inclined quartz vein Strike of vertical quartz vein Strike and dip of inclined joint/fracture surface Strike and dip of inclined joint/fracture surface (multiple observations at one location) Strike of vertical joint surface (multiple observations at one location) Strike of vertical joint surface 70 80 Strike and dip of compositional layering 73 78 85 Bearing and plunge of crenulation lineation Bearing and plunge of mineral or aggregate lineation Bearing and plunge of pencil lineation 50 47 Bearing and plunge of lineation - type undetermined 11 Bearing and plunge of mesoscale fold hinge 36 Qal PPfg PPg ZPbms ZPhbg ZPgg qrx Jd N.C. DESCRIPTION OF MAP UNITS Sedimentary Unit Unconsolidated, poorly sorted and poorly stratified tan to light gray stream deposits of gravel, sand, silt, and clay. Hydrothermal Unit Sizable accumulations of milky and/or smoky quartz, commonly with vuggy crystals. Locally includes breccia with angular fragments of granitoid rock and having a quartz matrix. Possibly related to quartz mineralization along brittle fracture zones or faults. Based on such occurrences, several fault segments are inferred, having typical trends NNW and E-W. Yellow squares indicate isolated outcrop or major float occurrence. Considered to be Mesozoic in age. Intrusive Units Steeply dipping to vertical, gray to blue-black, fine to medium crystalline, magnetite-bearing olivine diabase. Locally plagioclase porphyritic. Spheroidal weathering has produced ovoid to round residual cobbles and boulders. Steeply dipping to vertical, gray to bluish black, medium crystalline and typically plagioclase porphyritic, olivine-free augite + pigeonite diabase commonly containing quartz and/or alkali feldspar granophyre. Magnetite bearing. Occurs in a single extensive dike in the northwest corner of the quadrangle, where it can be easily traced along the upper (southern) stretches of Anderson Creek northward into the Middleburg Quadrangle. May be traced toward the south across Interstate Route 85. Enters the Henderson Quadrangle as it crosses US Route 1 Bypass. Spheroidal weathering has produced ovoid to round residual cobbles and boulders. This dike is evident on aeromagnetic maps. Medium-grained, equigranular to weakly porphyritic white, pink, orange or buff biotite ± muscovite granite (CI=8-15). Includes fine to medium-grained, non-porphyritic, locally foliated white mica ± garnet ± biotite leucogranite (CI less than 5), and rare granodiorite (CI=15-20). Pegmatite dikes common. Occurs in numerous pods in the northern half of the Vicksboro quad, typically surrounded by more strongly deformed and/or metamorphosed rocks. Dark gray, mesocratic, medium to coarse-grained hornblende-biotite diorite and gabbro and their weakly metamorphosed equivalents. Uralitized augite is common. Also contains magnetite and typically titanite. Best exposed along eastern end of Club Pond in the western Vicksboro quad; also occurs along a small creek in the northeastern part of the quad east of Deerfield Farms Rd. CI=40-60. Wise Pluton Leucocratic (CI less than 15), orange-tan to gray-tan, pink or salmon and white, medium to coarse-grained, generally equigranular but locally weakly porphyritic biotite ± epidote granite and sparse weakly porphyritic biotite ± white mica ± garnet leucogranite. Locally crosscuts foliated biotite granite. Locally contains enclaves of hornblende biotite gneiss (ZPhbg). Interpreted as belonging to the Wise pluton. Occurs along the eastern edge of the Vicksboro quad, mainly in the north. and/or to the Rolesville main phase of Speer (1994). Rolesville Batholith Medium-grained, generally equigranular white, pink, orange or buff biotite +/- muscovite leucogranite and granite, locally with garnet. Garnet commonly present as trapezohedral crystals. Occurs in the south-central Vicksboro quad in the upper stretches of Buffalo Creek where it is associated with and may contain xenoliths of gneiss and schist. Commonly cut by pegmatite dikes locally having smoky quartz. Also occurs near the center of the quad, along a tributary of Weaver Creek. CI = 2-8. Fine to coarse-grained, but primarily medium-grained, equigranular to moderately porphyritic (very rarely megacrystic), rarely foliated, pink or salmon and white biotite + muscovite monzogranite. Commonly has an almost idiomorphic fabric with well-formed alkali feldspar and plagioclase grains. Contains common biotite schlieren and local biotite crystal clots. Pegmatite dikes and pods are extremely common. Unit also contains relatively common xenoliths of gneiss and schist. Less commonly contains autoliths of fine granodiorite or tonalite and may display primary igneous layering between biotite-rich and biotite- poor phases. CI = 5-12. Weathered surfaces are commonly nubbly, friable and/or cavernous. Judged to be equivalent to the Rolesville main phase of Speer (1994), but commonly lacks muscovite. Occurs mainly in the southern and southeastern quarter of the Vicksboro quad. Heterogeneous granitoid unit typically consisting of streaky, gneissic, or layered biotite granitoid and biotite granitoid gneiss. Includes granite, leucogranite, and granodiorite and their gneissic counterparts. May contain biotite or feldspar foliation. Commonly contains magnetite. In southwestern Vicksboro quad, notably along Martin and Gills Little Mill Creeks. Rarely mylonitic. Leucocratic (CI less than 5-15) medium to coarse grained, pink or salmon and white, commonly porphyritic or porphyroclastic biotite granite, biotite leucogranite, and biotite granitoid orthogneiss. Strongly foliated, protomylonitic, or mylonitic in most exposures. K-feldspar porphyroclasts with local tails indicating a dextral shear sense. Pegmatite and aplite dikes and sills common and may be deformed. Includes some minor undeformed granite. Also includes minor biotite schlieren and biotite and biotite-hornblende gneiss enclaves. In northwestern Vicksboro quad and along the western edge. Lies between the Nutbush Creek and Lake Gordon mylonite zones. Rolesville Batholith or Buggs Island Pluton (?) Medium to coarsely crystalline, locally megacrystic, porphyroclastic, strongly foliated tan-gray to blue-gray, leucocratic to mesocratic, biotite + white mica granite and white mica ± biotite ± garnet leucogranite. Commonly protomylonitic to mylonitic and ultramylonitic. Commonly porphyroclastic. Includes mylonitized pegmatitic to coarsely crystalline, porphyroclastic white mica ± biotite + quartz + feldspar metagranitoid sills, presenting a migmatitic appearance. Also includes granitoid orthogneiss and numerous enclaves of biotite + hornblende gneiss, notably at the Greystone Quarry. Lies at least partly within the Lake Gordon mylonite zone. Metamorphic Units Raleigh Terrane Medium-fine to coarse crystalline, gray-tan to silvery, strongly foliated white mica + biotite schist with or without garnet, and biotite + white mica + garnet + sillimanite schist. Sillimanite and garnet may be overgrown by white mica. Commonly feldspathic. Locally phyllonitic to mylonitic with feldspar porphyroclasts. Locally contains chlorite. May be intruded by pegmatitic to coarsely crystalline, porphyroclastic white mica ± biotite + quartz + feldspar gneissic metagranitoid sills that are locally migmatitic. Locally includes small bodies of leucogranite. Medium to dark gray, fine to medium grained, moderately to well foliated biotite-quartz-plagioclase ±alkali feldspar gneiss and schist. Varies from unlayered biotite granitoid gneiss to variably layered biotite gneiss to schistose biotite gneiss and rarely biotite schist. Layers are typically discontinuous. Locally protomylonitic, mylonitic, or ultramylonitic. Locally carries garnet, epidote, or sulfide minerals. Locally associated with dikes and/or sills of pegmatite and/or leucogranite. Also occurs as xenoliths within granitoid bodies. Leucocratic to mesocratic (CI~20-45), black-gray to blue-gray, medium grained to porphyroclastic gneiss. More mafic occurrences locally contain clinopyroxene and/or epidote; pyroxene-rich rocks may be granulites. Biotite and/or hornblende define a foliation associated with mm-scale plagioclase and quartz compositional layers and, locally, larger plagioclase porphyroclasts. Weakly to strongly layered. Includes rare fine-grained calcsilicate rock or hornfels consisting of amphibole + quartz + sulfides ± clinopyroxene and/or biotite. Also includes fine to medium-grained, poorly to moderately well-layered amphibolite and amphibolite gneiss. Includes layers and other domains of biotite granitoid gneiss and small unmapped bodies of cross-cutting granite and leucogranite. Dikes and sills of pegmatite are profuse. Local grain size variations in part due to mylonitic overprint. Hypermelanocratic to melanocratic (CI greater than 65), green to black-green interlayers and pods of massive, coarse-grained talc ± actinolite schist and, locally, medium-grained metagabbro. Occurs as enclaves in ZPhbg. INTRODUCTION AND PREVIOUS MAPPING The Vicksboro 7.5-minute quadrangle lies at the mutual intersection of Warren, Franklin, and Vance Counties, North Carolina. The eastern outskirts of the city of Henderson, NC, county seat of Vance County, are along the western edge of the Vicksboro Quadrangle. Interstate Highway I-85 and US Highway 1 lie in the northwestern corner of the quadrangle. These highways run between Richmond, VA, and the Raleigh-Durham region of NC. NC Highway 39 lies in the southwestern part of the quadrangle, running northwest from Louisburg in Franklin County to Henderson. US Highway 401 crosses the extreme southeastern corner of the quadrangle, running northeast from Louisburg to Warrenton. The northern part of the area is traversed from west to east by SR 1001, which is known as Warrenton Road in Vance County, and as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd. in Warren County. In addition to a portion of the city of Henderson, the area contains the communities of Cokesbury, Gillburg, Faulkner Crossroads, Adcock Crossroads, Weldons Mill, Brookston, and Greystone in Vance County, and in Warren County, the populated places of Vicksboro and Axtell. It is a dominantly agricultural area, with several large dairy farms. A large crushed-stone operation, the Greystone Quarry, is operated by Vulcan Materials at the intersection of US Route 1 and Interstate 85 at the northwestern corner of the map area. Several Vance County public schools lie within the Vicksboro Quadrangle, including Aycock, Carver, and Clarke Elementary Schools, Vance County Middle School and Vance County High School. Aycock Recreation Center and Fox Pond Park, both operated by the City of Henderson, sit near the western edge of the quadrangle, and the North Carolina Motorsports Park lies in southwestern Warren County within the quadrangle. The area is drained by the upper stretches and by tributaries of Fishing, Shocco, and Sandy Creeks, which themselves are major tributaries of the Tar River. Anderson Creek flows northward into Kerr Lake from its source in the northwest corner of the area. Total relief is about 260 feet, with elevations of slightly less than 270 feet above sea level where Sandy Creek leaves the southern edge of the Vicksboro Quadrangle in the southeast, to over 530 feet above sea level between Greystone and Adcock Crossroads in the northwestern part of the area. The map area is underlain mainly by a diverse array of granitoid rocks, gneiss, and schist. Many of the rocks are highly deformed, and the western half of the area lies along two zones of intense ductile shear attributed to the Lake Gordon and Nutbush Creek faults. The granitoid rocks in the southern part of the map belong to the late Paleozoic (Alleghanian) Rolesville batholith. Granite along the eastern edge of the map belongs to the undeformed and presumed late Paleozoic Wise pluton. The granites are intrusive into gneisses and schists of the Raleigh terrane, interpreted as an infrastructural component of a Neoproterozoic volcanic arc (Hibbard and others, 2002). This understanding of the metamorphic country rocks in the region has been brought into question as a result of recent geochronological studies that have yielded mid-Paleozoic zircon ages (e.g. Finnerty and others, 2019). Prior to this investigation, little geologic mapping had been undertaken in the quadrangle, although it has been included in some regional and reconnaissance studies. Parker (1968) defined the structural framework of the region. McDaniel (1980) mapped a multi-county region, including Warren and Vance Counties, at a scale of 1:100,000. Farrar (1985a, b) mapped the entire eastern Piedmont of North Carolina, defined map units for the region, and proposed a model for the tectonic evolution of the region. Sacks (1996a, b, c, d) mapped a strip of four 7.5-minute quadrangles along the Virginia-North Carolina border, along strike to the north-northeast. Adjacent to the field area, 1:24,000-scale mapping has been done for the Middleburg Quadrangle to the north (Stoddard and others, 2016). Mapping of the Afton Quadrangle to the east is ongoing (Blake, Peach, Morrow, and Nolan, in progress). To the south and west of the Vicksboro Quadrangle, the Ingleside (Stoddard, 2010) and Henderson (Blake and Stoddard, 2016) Quadrangles have been mapped at 1:24,000. PPrgk PPrgd PPrgj PPrgfm Jd2 Plots and calculations created using Stereonet v. 8.6.0 based on Allmendinger et al. (2013) and Cardozo and Allmendinger (2013). Unidirectional Rose Diagram of Joints N = 204 Outer Circle = 10% Mean vector = 92 degrees Equal-Area Schmidt Net Projection of Contoured Poles to Foliation and Schistosity Contour Interval = 2 sigma N = 315 Equal-Area Schmidt Net Projection of Contoured Poles to Compositional and Gneissic Layering Contour Interval = 2 sigma N = 294 Equal-Area Schmidt Net Projection of Fold Hinges (black circles) and Lineations (Mineral, Pencil and other) (blue squares) Fold Hinges N = 15 Lineations N = 22 ZPum PPgd by foot by car PPwg concealed contact inferred contact observation station location quartz cataclasite zone concealed quartz cataclasite zone inferred inferred ductile strike-slip fault concealed ductile strike-slip fault Quaternary alluvium contact diabase station location diabase dike, location known bull quartz vein station location quartz cataclasite station location abandoned quarry In cross section, for ductile strike-slip faults, the circle with an X indicates movement away from the observer, the circle with a dot indicates movement towards the observer. cross section line A A' crushed stone quarry - active strike and dip of brittle fault Strike of vertical compositional layering Strike of vertical undifferentiated shear strain foliation (multiple observations at one location) Strike and dip of vertical undifferentiated shear strain foliation 41 Strike and dip of inclined schistosity Strike and dip of inclined schistosity (multiple observations at one location) 70 80 85 48 diabase dike, location inferred