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GeoRef Categories
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Nomlaki Tuff
Cenozoic Fluvial-Facies Architecture and Aquifer Heterogeneity, Oroville, California, Superfund Site and Vicinity Available to Purchase
Abstract A three-dimensional facies analysis of Cenozoic fluvial deposits in the vicinity of a federal Superfund site near Oroville, California, was conducted to characterize aquifer heterogeneity and to provide a basis for accurate modeling of the complex groundwater system. A network of 29 boreholes in the 6.5-km 2 study area penetrated four distinctive fluvial units, including the Laguna Formation (upper Pliocene-Holocene), Nomlaki Tuff (upper Pliocene), Mehrten Formation (Miocene-upper Pliocene), and lone Formation (Eocene). All four formations consist of pebble-cobble gravel, sand, and clay deposited by the Feather and ancestral Feather River systems at the margin of the Sacramento Basin near the western Sierra Nevada mountain front. Sediment gravity flows and waterlain andesitic and pumice-rich volcaniclastic facies derived from the southernmost Cascade volcanic centers episodically choked the ancestral Feather River system during late Pliocene upper Mehrten and Nomlaki Tuff deposition. Cenozoic fluvial aggradation was interrupted by three periods of valley cutting, which occurred 1) during the Oligocene, between deposition of the lone and Mehrten Formations; 2) during the late Pliocene, between deposition of the Nomlaki Tuff and Laguna Formation; and 3) during the middle Pleistocene, after most Laguna deposition was completed. The Oligocene and late Pliocene paleovalleys, 24 to 61 m deep, are filled with vertically and laterally interconnected channel pebble-cobble gravel of the Mehrten and Laguna sequences. The principal aquifer zones in the study area are >30-m-thick units of hydraulically continuous channel gravel and sand of the Laguna, Mehrten, and lone Formations. These aquifer zones are continuous across Oligocene and late Pliocene paleovalley margins through channel-fill gravel and sand of the various formations. Floodplain clay and volcaniclastic debris-flow units act as aquitards, which locally limit the interaction between permeable zones. A dissolved pentachlorophenol plume in local ground water originates at the Superfund site (a wood treatment plant) in the northern end of the study area, where it initially moves within the Laguna Formation. The plume has migrated into hydraulically continuous Mehrten and lone gravels that are in contact -425 m south of the plant site. The plume has also passed into juxtaposed Mehrten and Laguna gravels 1,400 m south of the plant site. Pumping-test data demonstrate that no marked changes in hydraulic conductivity occur across the paleo v alley- fu11 boundaries. Local changes in the hydraulic-gradient vector are caused by changes in the permeability of the aquifer material or in the thickness of the aquifer zones, both of which are associated with lateral changes in formations and facies.
Upper Neogene tephrochronologic correlations of the Española Basin and Jemez Mountains volcanic field, northern Rio Grande rift, north-central New Mexico Available to Purchase
We used tephrochronology for upper Neogene deposits in the Española Basin and the adjoining Jemez Mountains volcanic field in the Rio Grande rift, northern New Mexico, to correlate key tephra strata in the study area, identify the sources for many of these tephra, and refine the maximum age of an important stratigraphic unit. Electron-microprobe analyses on volcanic glass separated from 146 pumice-fall, ash-fall, and ash-flow tephra units and layers show that they are mainly rhyolites and dacites. Jemez Mountains tephra units range in age from Miocene to Quaternary. From oldest to youngest these are: (1) the Canovas Canyon Rhyolite and the Paliza Canyon Formation of the lower Keres Group (ca. <12.4–7.4 Ma); (2) the Peralta Tuff Member of the Bearhead Rhyolite of the upper Keres Group (ca. 6.96–6.76 Ma); (3) Puye Formation tephra layers (ca. 5.3–1.75 Ma); (4) the informal San Diego Canyon ignimbrites (ca. 1.87–1.84 Ma); (5) the Otowi Member of the Bandelier Tuff, including the basal Guaje Pumice Bed (both ca. 1.68–1.61 Ma); (6) the Cerro Toledo Rhyolite (ca. 1.59–1.22 Ma); (7) the Tshirege Member of the Bandelier Tuff, including the basal Tsankawi Pumice Bed (both ca. 1.25–1.21 Ma); and (8) the El Cajete Member of the Valles Rhyolite (ca. 60–50 ka). The Paliza Canyon volcaniclastic rocks are chemically variable; they range in composition from dacite to dacitic andesite and differ in chemical composition from the younger units. The Bearhead Rhyolite is highly evolved and can be readily distinguished from the younger units. Tuffs in the Puye Formation are dacitic rather than rhyolitic in composition, and their glasses contain significantly higher Fe, Ca, Mg, and Ti, and lower contents of Si, Na, and K. We conclude that the Puye is entirely younger than the Bearhead Rhyolite and that its minimum age is ca. 1.75 Ma. The San Diego Canyon ignimbrites can be distinguished from all members of the overlying Bandelier Tuff on the basis of Fe and Ca. The Cerro Toledo tephra layers are readily distinguishable from the overlying and underlying units of the Bandelier Tuff primarily by lower Fe and Ca contents. The Tshirege and Otowi Members of the Bandelier Tuff are difficult to distinguish from each other on the basis of electron-microprobe analysis of the volcanic glass; the Tshirege Member contains on average more Fe than the Otowi Member. Tephra layers in the Española Basin that correlate to the Lava Creek B ash bed (ca. 640 ka) and the Nomlaki Tuff (Member of the Tuscan and Tehama Formations, ca. 3.3 Ma) indicate how far tephra from these eruptions traveled (the Yellowstone caldera of northwestern Wyoming and the southern Cascade Range of northern California, respectively). Tephra layers of Miocene age (16–10 Ma) sampled from the Tesuque Formation of the Santa Fe Group in the Española Basin correlate to sources associated with the southern Nevada volcanic field (Timber Mountain, Black Mountain, and Oasis Valley calderas) and the Snake River Plain–Yellowstone hot spot track in Idaho and northwestern Wyoming. Correlations of these tephra layers across the Santa Clara fault provide timelines through various stratigraphic sections despite differences in stratigraphy and lithology. We use tephra correlations to constrain the age of the base of the Ojo Caliente Sandstone Member of the Tesuque Formation to 13.5–13.3 Ma.
Geology and technology of some natural pozzolans in north central California Available to Purchase
Geology and Lahars of the Tuscan Formation, Northern California Available to Purchase
The Tuscan Formation consists of dominant tuff breccia and lapilli tuff, and minor lava flows, flow breccias, and tuff; volcanic conglomerate, sandstone, and siltstone are important constituents in its western portion near and in the subsurface of the Sacramento Valley. Chemical analyses from the major source areas suggest that breccia clasts of the Tuscan Formation are andesite and basaltic andesite. The formation has a maximum exposed thickness of 1700 feet and once covered about 2000 square miles. Silicic ash-flow tuffs, included in the Tuscan Formation, previously have been correlated with the Nomlaki Tuff Member, but as several silicic tuff units are present, such correlations are not always justified. The late Pliocene age of the Tuscan Formation is supported by nonmarine diatoms. Radiometric dates and the almost total absence of paleosols in the Tuscan Formation suggest that its lahars were emplaced relatively rapidly, probably in less than a million years. Maps of the distribution and thickness of the Tuscan Formation are presented, from which it is inferred that laharic debris originally amounted to 300 cubic miles. Principal source areas of the Tuscan lahars include two eroded composite volcanoes south of Lassen Peak and two lesser source areas of indefinite form northwest of Lassen Peak. Small groups of tuff-breccia dikes west of the volcanoes apparently contributed only slight amounts of debris. Mount Yana, the chief source of the Tuscan and the southernmost volcano of the Cascade Range, was constructed chiefly of flows of pyroxene andesite and interbedded thick laharic units. A dike swarm that included many tuff-breccia dikes invaded the central part of the volcano. After volcanism ceased, slight fault movement disrupted the central part of the volcano and facilitated erosion, which then excavated a large central depression. Structural control was exerted by a major east-west lineament that probably marks the structural northern limit of the Sierra Nevada. Indirect evidence suggests vertical movement of about 2500 feet in Pliocene time. Water needed for the mobility of the Tuscan lahars probably did not come from extensive fields of snow or ice. Heavy rainfall is a possible source of water, but estimates of available magmatic and meteoric water show that ample water is available from these sources. Significant proportions of the lahars formed by near-surface autobrecciation in dikes and central conduits at temperatures less than 800° C, and probably in the range 340° to 280° C. The mechanism of brecciation proposed by Curtis (1954) probably was effective at Mount Yana.
Reconstructing late Pliocene to middle Pleistocene Death Valley lakes and river systems as a test of pupfish (Cyprinodontidae) dispersal hypotheses Available to Purchase
During glacial (pluvial) climatic periods, Death Valley is hypothesized to have episodically been the terminus for the Amargosa, Owens, and Mojave Rivers. Geological and biological studies have tended to support this hypothesis and a hydrological link that included the Colorado River, allowing dispersal of pupfish throughout southeastern California and western Nevada. Recent mitochondrial deoxyribonucleic acid (mtDNA) studies show a common pupfish (Cyprinodontidae) ancestry in this region with divergence beginning 3–2 Ma. We present tephrochronologic and paleomagnetic data in the context of testing the paleohydrologic connections with respect to the common collection point of the Amargosa, Owens, and Mojave Rivers in Death Valley during successive time periods: (1) the late Pliocene to early Pleistocene (3–2 Ma), (2) early to middle Pleistocene (1.2–0.5 Ma), and (3) middle to late Pleistocene (<0.7–0.03 Ma; paleolakes Manly and Mojave). Using the 3.35 Ma Zabriskie Wash tuff and 3.28 Ma Nomlaki Tuff Member of the Tuscan and Tehama Formations, which are prominent marker beds in the region, we conclude that at 3–2 Ma, a narrow lake occupied the ancient Furnace Creek Basin and that Death Valley was not hydrologically connected with the Amargosa or Mojave Rivers. A paucity of data for Panamint Valley does not allow us to evaluate an Owens River connection to Death Valley ca. 3–2 Ma. Studies by others have shown that Death Valley was not hydrologically linked to the Amargosa, Owens, or Mojave Rivers from 1.2 to 0.5 Ma. We found no evidence that Lake Manly flooded back up the Mojave River to pluvial Lake Mojave between 0.18 and 0.12 Ma, although surface water flowed from the Amargosa and Owens Rivers to Death Valley at this time. There is also no evidence for a connection of the Owens, Amargosa, or Mojave Rivers to the Colorado River in the last 3–2 m.y. Therefore, the hypothesis that pupfish dispersed or were isolated in basins throughout southeastern California and western Nevada by such a connection is not supported. Beyond the biologically predicted time frame, however, sparse and disputed data suggest that a fluvial system connected Panamint (Owens River), Death, and Amargosa Valleys, which could account for the dispersal and isolation before 3 Ma.
Geologic map of the Artists Drive area, based on mapping by J.R. Knott (199... Available to Purchase
Harker variation diagrams displaying whole-rock chemistry for Goldstein Pea... Open Access
(A) Vector end-point plots for selected samples from Artists Drive and Zabr... Available to Purchase
Late Neogene–Quaternary tephrochronology, stratigraphy, and paleoclimate of Death Valley, California, USA Available to Purchase
Stratigraphic evidence for the role of lake spillover in the inception of the lower Colorado River in southern Nevada and western Arizona Available to Purchase
Late Miocene and early Pliocene sediments exposed along the lower Colorado River near Laughlin, Nevada, contain evidence that establishment of this reach of the river after 5.6 Ma involved flooding from lake spillover through a bedrock divide between Cottonwood Valley to the north and Mohave Valley to the south. Lacustrine marls interfingered with and conformably overlying a sequence of post–5.6 Ma fine-grained valley-fill deposits record an early phase of intermittent lacustrine inundation restricted to Cottonwood Valley. Limestone, mud, sand, and minor gravel of the Bouse Formation were subsequently deposited above an unconformity. At the north end of Mohave Valley, a coarse-grained, lithologically distinct fluvial conglomerate separates subaerial, locally derived fan deposits from subaqueous deposits of the Bouse Formation. We interpret this key unit as evidence for overtopping and catastrophic breaching of the paleodivide immediately before deep lacustrine inundation of both valleys. Exposures in both valleys reveal a substantial erosional unconformity that records drainage of the lake and predates the arrival of sediment of the through-going Colorado River. Subsequent river aggradation culminated in the Pliocene between 4.1 and 3.3 Ma. The stratigraphic associations and timing of this drainage transition are consistent with geochemical evidence linking lacustrine conditions to the early Colorado River, the timings of drainage integration and canyon incision on the Colorado Plateau, the arrival of Colorado River sand at its terminus in the Salton Trough, and a downstream-directed mode of river integration common in areas of crustal extension.
Late Cenozoic tephrochronology of the Mount Diablo area within the evolving plate-tectonic boundary zone of northern California Available to Purchase
ABSTRACT We present a tephrochronologic/chronostratigraphic database for the Mount Diablo area and greater San Francisco Bay region that provides a spatial and temporal framework for geologic studies in the region, including stratigraphy, paleogeography, tectonics, quantification of earth surface processes, recurrence of natural hazards, and climate change. We identified and correlated 34 tephra layers within this region using the chemical composition of their volcanic glasses, stratigraphic sequence, and isotopic and other dating techniques. Tephra layers range in age from ca. 65 ka to ca. 29 Ma, as determined by direct radiometric techniques or by correlation to sites where they have been dated. The tephra layers are of Quaternary or Neogene age except for two that are of Oligocene age. We correlated the tephra layers among numerous sites throughout northern California. Source areas of the tephra layers are the Snake River–Yellowstone hotspot trend of northern Nevada, southern Idaho, and western Wyoming; the Nevadaplano caldera complex of central Nevada; the Jemez Mountains–Valles Caldera in northwestern New Mexico; the Southern Nevada volcanic field and related source areas in eastern California and west-central Nevada; the Quien Sabe–Sonoma volcanic centers of the California Coast Ranges; and the young Cascade Range volcanic centers of northeastern California and Oregon.
Pliocene–Pleistocene basin evolution along the Garlock fault zone, Pilot Knob Valley, California Open Access
Lake Andrei: A Pliocene pluvial lake in Eureka Valley, eastern California Available to Purchase
ABSTRACT We used geologic mapping, tephrochronology, and 40 Ar/ 39 Ar dating to describe evidence of a ca. 3.5 Ma pluvial lake in Eureka Valley, eastern California, that we informally name herein Lake Andrei. We identified six different tuffs in the Eureka Valley drainage basin, including two previously undescribed tuffs: the 3.509 ± 0.009 Ma tuff of Hanging Rock Canyon and the 3.506 ± 0.010 Ma tuff of Last Chance (informal names). We focused on four Pliocene stratigraphic sequences. Three sequences are composed of fluvial sandstone and conglomerate, with basalt flows in two of these sequences. The fourth sequence, located ~1.5 km south of the Death Valley/Big Pine Road along the western piedmont of the Last Chance Range, included green, fine-grained, gypsiferous lacustrine deposits interbedded with the 3.506 Ma tuff of Last Chance that we interpret as evidence of a pluvial lake. Pluvial Lake Andrei is similar in age to pluvial lakes in Searles Valley, Amargosa Valley, Fish Lake Valley, and Death Valley of the western Great Basin. We interpret these simultaneous lakes in the region as indirect evidence of a significant glacial climate in western North America during marine isotope stages Mammoth/Gilbert 5 to Mammoth 2 (MIS MG5/M2) and a persistent Pacific jet stream south of 37°N.
The Goldstein Peak Formation, central California: Record of a nonmarine intra-arc basin within the Early Cretaceous Sierra Nevada arc Open Access
River-evolution and tectonic implications of a major Pliocene aggradation on the lower Colorado River: The Bullhead Alluvium Open Access
Paleogeomorphology and evolution of the early Colorado River inferred from relationships in Mohave and Cottonwood valleys, Arizona, California, and Nevada Open Access
Zircon age and oxygen isotopic correlations between Bouse Formation tephra and the Lawlor Tuff Open Access
Late Cenozoic paleogeographic reconstruction of the San Francisco Bay area from analysis of stratigraphy, tectonics, and tephrochronology Available to Purchase
ABSTRACT The Neogene stratigraphic and tectonic history of the Mount Diablo area is a consequence of the passage of the Mendocino triple junction by the San Francisco Bay area between 12 and 6 Ma, volcanism above a slab window trailing the Mendocino triple junction, and crustal transpression beginning ca. 8–6 Ma, when the Pacific plate and Sierra Nevada microplate began to converge obliquely. Between ca. 12 and 6 Ma, parts of the Sierra Nevada microplate were displaced by faults splaying from the main trace of the San Andreas fault and incorporated into the Pacific plate. The Mount Diablo anticlinorium was formed by crustal compression within a left-stepping, restraining bend of the eastern San Andreas fault system, with southwest-verging thrusting beneath, and with possible clockwise rotation between faults on its southeast and northwest sides. At ca. 10.5 Ma, a drainage divide formed between the northern Central Valley and the ocean. Regional uplift accelerated at ca. 6 Ma with onset of transpression between the Pacific and North America plates. Marine deposition ceased in the eastern Coast Range basins as a consequence of the regional uplift accompanying passage of the Mendocino triple junction, and trailing slab-window volcanism. From ca. 11 to ca. 5 Ma, andesitic volcanic intrusive rocks and lavas were erupted along the northwest crest of the central to northern Sierra Nevada and deposited on its western slope, providing abundant sediment to the northern Central Valley and the northeastern Coast Ranges. Sediment filled the Central Valley and overtopped the Stockton fault and arch, forming one large, south-draining system that flowed into a marine embayment at its southwestern end, the ancestral San Joaquin Sea. This marine embayment shrunk with time, and by ca. 2.3 Ma, it was eventually cut off from the ocean. Fluvial drainage continued southwest in the Central Valley until it was cut off in turn, probably by some combination of sea-level fluctuations and transpression along the San Andreas fault that uplifted, lengthened, and narrowed the outlet channel. As a consequence, a great lake, Lake Clyde, formed in the Central Valley at ca. 1.4 Ma, occupying all of the ancestral San Joaquin Valley and part of the ancestral Sacramento Valley. The lake rose and fell with global glacial and interglacial cycles. After a long, extreme glacial period, marine oxygen isotope stage (MIS) 16, it overtopped the Carquinez sill at 0.63 Ma and drained via San Francisco valley (now San Francisco Bay) and the Colma gap into the Merced marine embayment of the Pacific Ocean. Later, a new outlet for Central Valley drainage formed between ca. 130 and ca. 75 ka, when the Colma gap closed due to transpression and right-slip motion on the San Andreas fault, and Duxbury Point at the south end of the Point Reyes Peninsula moved sufficiently northwest along the San Andreas fault to unblock a bedrock notch, the feature we now call the Golden Gate.