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Minimal net incision of the northern Sierra Nevada (California, USA) since the Eocene–early Oligocene
ABSTRACT Lignin phenol, pollen, and diatom analyses were performed on dated sediments (13,533–8993 cal yr B.P.) recovered from Fallen Leaf Lake, California. This multiproxy data set constrains the end of the Tioga glaciation in the Lake Tahoe Basin and reconstructs the response of the region’s aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems to climatic changes that accompanied the Younger Dryas, the end of the Pleistocene, and early Holocene warming. From the Pleistocene to the Holocene, lignin concentrations and syringyl/vanillyl (S/V) ratios increased, while cinnamyl/vanillyl (C/V) ratios and the lignin phenol vegetation index (LPVI) decreased, recording the proliferation of woody plant material and, particularly, the expansion of angiosperms as the Tioga glaciation ended and temperatures warmed. This interpretation is constrained by lignin phenol analyses of plant material from Fallen Leaf Lake’s present-day watershed. Complementary palynological analyses show a transition from a gymnosperm-dominated landscape to a more mixed angiosperm-gymnosperm vegetation assemblage that formed as closed canopy forests became more open and grasses and aster colonized meadows. Aquatic flora assemblages, in the form of greater amounts of green algae and greater percentages of diatom phytoplankton, indicate increased levels of lake primary productivity in response to warming. Principal component analysis (PCA) distinctly resolves the Pleistocene from the Holocene diatom flora. The Pleistocene flora is dominated by cyclotelloids and low-mantled Aulacoseira species that are rare in Fallen Leaf Lake today, but common at higher and colder elevations that may resemble the Pleistocene Fallen Leaf Lake. The Holocene diatom flora is dominated by Aulacoseira subarctica .
Lithological and structural controls on river profiles and networks in the northern Sierra Nevada (California, USA)
The Tahoe-Sierra frontal fault zone, Emerald Bay area, Lake Tahoe, California: History, displacements, and rates
ABSTRACT The Great Valley forearc basin records Jurassic(?)–Eocene sedimentation along the western margin of North America during eastward subduction of the Farallon plate and development of the Sierra Nevada magmatic arc. The four-dimensional (4-D) basin model of the northern Great Valley forearc presented here was designed to reconstruct its depositional history from Tithonian through Maastrichtian time. Based on >1200 boreholes, the tops of 13 formations produce isopach maps and cross sections that highlight the spatial and temporal variability of sediment accumulation along and across the basin. The model shows the southward migration of depocenters within the basin during the Cretaceous and eastward lapping of basin strata onto Sierra Nevada basement. In addition, the model presents the first basement map of the entire Sacramento subbasin, highlighting its topography at the onset of deposition of the Great Valley Group. Minimum volume estimates for sedimentary basin fill reveal variable periods of flux, with peak sedimentation corresponding to deposition of the Sites Sandstone during Turonian to Coniacian time. Comparison of these results with flux estimates from magmatic source regions shows a slight lag in the timing of peak sedimentation, likely reflecting the residence time from pluton emplacement to erosion. This model provides the foundation for the first three-dimensional subsidence analysis on an ancient forearc basin, which will yield insight into the mechanisms driving development of accommodation along convergent margins.
ABSTRACT Lower Mesozoic clastic rocks that unconformably overlie Paleozoic rocks within the Northern Sierra terrane provide clues regarding the evolution of the terrane during a 60 m.y. interval spanning the late Carnian through Bajocian. New detrital-zircon data provide fresh insights into the ages and provenance of these clastic rocks, together with new inferences about the Mesozoic tectonic evolution of the terrane. Previous studies have shown that from the late Carnian to the Sinemurian (~40 m.y.), a 1-km-thick section of subaerial to shallow-marine clastic arc-derived sediment accumulated and shallow-marine carbonate was deposited. At the base of this section, detrital-zircon results suggest the Northern Sierra terrane was located near a source area, possibly the El Paso terrane, containing Permian igneous rocks ranging in age from 270 to 254 Ma. By the earliest Jurassic, the detrital-zircon data suggest the Northern Sierra terrane was located near a source containing latest Triassic–earliest Jurassic igneous rocks spanning 209–186 Ma. The source of this material may have been the Happy Creek volcanic complex of the Black Rock terrane. A deep-marine, anoxic basin developed within the Northern Sierra terrane ca. 187–168 Ma. Approximately 3.5 km of distal turbidites were deposited in this basin. Previously reported geochemical characteristics of these turbidites link the Northern Sierra terrane with arc rock of the Black Rock terrane during this interval, except for a short time in the late Toarcian, when the terrane received an influx of quartz-rich sediment, likely derived from Mesozoic erg deposits now exposed on the Colorado Plateau. Clastic deposition within the Northern Sierra terrane ended in the Bajocian. Eruption of proximal-facies, mafic volcanic rocks and intrusion of hypabyssal rock and 168–163 Ma plutons reflect development of a magmatic arc within the terrane. These igneous rocks represent the first unequivocal evidence that the Northern Sierra terrane was located within a convergent-margin arc during the Triassic and Jurassic. Because detrital-zircon data from Lower Mesozoic strata within the Northern Sierra terrane indicate that it was depositionally linked with differing source areas through time early in the Mesozoic, the terrane may have been mobile along the western margin of Laurentia. There is little evidence from sediment within the Lower Mesozoic section of the terrane that can clearly be tied to the craton or the continental-margin Triassic arc prior to the late Toarcian. The absence of Upper Triassic or Lower Jurassic plutonic rocks within the terrane prior to the mid-Bajocian is also consistent with some form of isolation from the continental-margin arc system. While new detrital-zircon results place the Northern Sierra terrane proximal to the western margin of Laurentia in the late Toarcian, the current location of the terrane likely reflects Early Cretaceous offset along the Mojave–Snow Lake fault.
Application of U-Th-Pb Phosphate Geochronology to Young Orogenic Gold Deposits: New Age Constraints on the Formation of the Grass Valley Gold District, Sierra Nevada Foothills Province, California
Tsunami-generated sediment wave channels at Lake Tahoe, California-Nevada, USA
First record and phylogenetic significance of a Jurassic diadematacean sea urchin from California
Petrologic, tectonic, and metallogenic evolution of the southern segment of the ancestral Cascades magmatic arc, California and Nevada
Arsenic Associated with Historical Gold Mining in the Sierra Nevada Foothills: Case Study and Field Trip Guide for Empire Mine State Historic Park, California
Paleoseismic history of the Fallen Leaf segment of the West Tahoe–Dollar Point fault reconstructed from slide deposits in the Lake Tahoe Basin, California-Nevada
Holocene subaqueous paleoseismology of Lake Tahoe
Lidar and Google Earth: Simplifying access to high-resolution topography data
High-resolution topography data acquired with lidar (light detection and ranging) technology are revolutionizing the way we study Earth surface processes. These data permit analysis of the mechanisms that drive landscape evolution at resolutions not previously possible yet essential for their appropriate representation. Unfortunately, the volume of data produced by the technology, software requirements, and a steep learning curve are barriers to lidar utilization. To encourage access to these data we use Keyhole Markup Language (KML) and Google Earth to deliver lidar-derived visualizations of these data for research and educational purposes. Display of full-resolution images derived from lidar in the Google Earth virtual globe is a powerful way to view and explore these data. Through region-dependent network linked KML (a.k.a., super-overlay), users are able to access lidar-derived imagery stored on a remote server from within Google Earth. This method provides seamless, Internet-based access to imagery through the simple download of a small KML-format file from the OpenTopography Facility portal. Lidar-derived imagery in Google Earth is the most popular product available via OpenTopography and has greatly enhanced the usability and thus impact of these data. Users ranging from scientists to K–12 educators have downloaded KML files ~12,000 times during the first eight months of 2011. The overwhelming usage of these data products demonstrates the impact of this simple yet novel approach for delivering easy to use lidar data visualizations to Earth scientists, students, and the general public.