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GEOREF RECORD

Origin and diagenetic alteration of the lower part of the John Day Formation near Mitchell, Oregon

Richard L. Hay
Origin and diagenetic alteration of the lower part of the John Day Formation near Mitchell, Oregon (in Petrologic studies--A volume in honor of A. F. Buddington)
Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States (1962) 191-216

Abstract

The lower 1100 ft of the 2300-ft John Day Formation near Mitchell consists largely of massive tuffaceous claystones and vitric tuffs. These deposits, of early Miocene to late Oligocene age, are an air-laid accumulation of silicic (dominantly dacitic) ash on a land surface that was initially hilly, but later became almost level. Much of the vitric ash weathered to montmorillonite before burial; nearly all the unweathered ash was subsequently altered to montmorillonite and clinoptilolite. The principal pyrogenic minerals are at least locally altered in the lower 350 ft of the formation, and clinoptilolite, orthoclase, vermiculite, kaolinite, fluorapatite, cristobalite, and quartz are among the authigenic minerals formed within these beds. Authigenic orthoclase has been noted within the John Day Formation over an area of about 600 sq mi, and, with one exception, it has not been observed in overlying and underlying volcanic rocks. The orthoclase is a relatively pure K feldspar; it occurs as a pseudomorph after plagioclase and forms between a trace and 8% of the claystones. A K-Ar age of 22 m. y. was obtained from authigenic orthoclase in a bed 65 ft above the base of the formation, and seemingly reliable ages of 31 and 24-25 m. y., respectively, were obtained from pyrogenic materials from beds 165 and 1110 ft above the base. Authigenic orthoclase was probably formed at burial depths between 400 and 2200 ft, and at a temperature of 20 degrees -400 degrees C. K and Si needed to form orthoclase were supplied by the alteration of glass. Laboratory studies suggest that a K+/H+ ratio of 10 (super 9) may be necessary to form orthoclase within its stability field at temperatures of 20 degrees -40 degrees C., but the geologic data suggest that the K+/H+ ratio in the subsurface water was probably no more than 2.5X10 (super 6.5) at the time of formation of the authigenic orthoclase of the John Day Formation.


Title: Origin and diagenetic alteration of the lower part of the John Day Formation near Mitchell, Oregon
Title: Petrologic studies--A volume in honor of A. F. Buddington
Author(s): Hay, Richard L.
Pages: 191-216
Published: 1962
Text Language: English
Publisher: Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
Accession Number: 1962-006284
Categories: GeochronologySedimentary petrologyStratigraphy
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus., tables
N42°00'00" - N46°19'60", W124°34'60" - W116°34'60"
Source Note: New York, Geol. Soc. America
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from Bibliography and Index of North American Geology, U. S. Geological Survey, Reston, VA, United States
Update Code: 1962
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