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GSA Special Papers
Ash-Flow Tuffs
Author(s)
Geological Society of America

Volume
180
Copyright:
© 1979 Geological Society of America
Geological Society of America
ISBN print:
9780813721804
Publication date:
January 01, 1979
Book Chapter
The Bishop Tuff: Evidence for the origin of compositional zonation in silicic magma chambers
Author(s)
-
Published:January 01, 1979
The ash-fall and outflow sheets of the 0.7-m.y.-old Bishop Tuff represent >170 km3 of compositionally zoned rhyolitic magma emplaced during collapse of the Long Valley caldera, California. Field, mineralogic, and chemical evidence agree that tapping of the thermally and chemically zoned chamber was continuous, without interruptions sufficient to permit mixing or phase re-equilibration. Fe-Ti oxide temperatures for 68 glassy samples increase systematically with eruptive progress from 720 to 790 °C; this increase corresponds well with the stratigraphic sequence, but the temperatures in no way correspond to the degree of welding. Ubiquitous quartz, sanidine, oligoclase, biotite, ilmenite, titanomagnetite, zircon, and...
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Index Terms/Descriptors
- acidic composition
- ash flows
- ash-flow tuff
- Bishop Tuff
- California
- Cenozoic
- composition
- data
- differentiation
- fractional crystallization
- geochemistry
- igneous rocks
- magma chambers
- magmas
- major elements
- mineral composition
- Mono County California
- Pleistocene
- pyroclastics
- pyroclastics and glasses
- Quaternary
- rhyolitic composition
- trace elements
- tuff
- United States
- volcanic rocks
- volcanism
- volcanology
- zoning
Latitude & Longitude
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