1-20 OF 1904 RESULTS FOR

North Pass Caldera

Results shown limited to content with bounding coordinates.
Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Image
Generalized geologic map of the North Pass caldera (unpublished mapping, 2001–2006). The caldera was filled to overflow by younger rocks, and subsequently tilted gently eastward toward a Rio-Grande rift-related fault zone along Sheep Creek. Geographic localities: BC—Buffalo Pass Campground; CP—Cochetopa Pass; HM—Hat Mountain; LM—Lake Mountain; ML—Mount Lion; NP—North Pass; PB—Point Benny; SP—Spanish Pass; TM—Trickle Mountain; 9519′—Hill 9,519′ elevation. Insert, area of Figure 7.
Published: 01 July 2008
Figure 4. Generalized geologic map of the North Pass caldera (unpublished mapping, 2001–2006). The caldera was filled to overflow by younger rocks, and subsequently tilted gently eastward toward a Rio-Grande rift-related fault zone along Sheep Creek. Geographic localities: BC—Buffalo Pass
Image
Photographs: (A) East wall of North Pass caldera, as viewed obliquely from the south across Saguache Valley (along Colorado Highway 114). Outflow Saguache Creek Tuff and underlying Conejos lavas and tuffs are abruptly truncated along caldera wall; then onlapped by ponded caldera-filling dacite and andesite lavas (ca. 30 Ma) and overlying Fish Canyon Tuff. (B) Megablock of shattered Luders Creek Tuff, forming large clast (20 m across) within the Buffalo Pass debris-flow deposit, makes bold outcrops along Colorado Highway 114 at the Buffalo Pass campground, looking west. Note vehicle on highway, for scale. On skyline is near-original profile of a thick caldera-filling lava dome (dacite of East Pass Creek, volcanics of Cochetopa Hills); sample from base of southern (left) cliff yielded a 40Ar/39Ar age (biotite) of 32.20 ± 0.09 Ma (Table 2, Appendix 1).
Published: 01 July 2008
Figure 5. Photographs: (A) East wall of North Pass caldera, as viewed obliquely from the south across Saguache Valley (along Colorado Highway 114). Outflow Saguache Creek Tuff and underlying Conejos lavas and tuffs are abruptly truncated along caldera wall; then onlapped by ponded caldera-filling
Image
Geologic map of the northwest margin, North Pass caldera, showing complexly intermixed lithologies along Colorado Highway 114, near the junction of Lujan and Slane Creeks. These features are interpreted as intracaldera landslide megabreccia, in a matrix of nonwelded to weakly welded Saguache Creek Tuff that erupted from this caldera. The megabreccia and tuff matrix are overlain by thick caldera-filling lavas (dacite of East Pass Creek). Location shown on Figure 4.
Published: 01 July 2008
Figure 7. Geologic map of the northwest margin, North Pass caldera, showing complexly intermixed lithologies along Colorado Highway 114, near the junction of Lujan and Slane Creeks. These features are interpreted as intracaldera landslide megabreccia, in a matrix of nonwelded to weakly welded
Series: GSA Field Guide
Published: 01 January 2013
DOI: 10.1130/2013.0033(14)
EISBN: 9780813756332
... volcanologic problems. The initial part of the guide summarizes results from recently completed mapping and new geochronologic results for the Cochetopa Park and North Pass calderas and associated eruptive deposits ( Lipman and McIntosh, 2008 ; Lipman, 2012 ). The main focus is on the extraordinarily exposed...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 July 2008
GSA Bulletin (2008) 120 (7-8): 771–795.
...Figure 4. Generalized geologic map of the North Pass caldera (unpublished mapping, 2001–2006). The caldera was filled to overflow by younger rocks, and subsequently tilted gently eastward toward a Rio-Grande rift-related fault zone along Sheep Creek. Geographic localities: BC—Buffalo Pass...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Eruptive and noneruptive <span class="search-highl...
Second thumbnail for: Eruptive and noneruptive <span class="search-highl...
Third thumbnail for: Eruptive and noneruptive <span class="search-highl...
Image
Oblique view (Google Earth), looking north at Cochetopa and North Pass calderas. The topographic rim of Cochetopa Park caldera (~30 km across) is morphologically well preserved (dashed white lines): along its northwest and north sides, high points on the rim are marked by Sawtooth Mountain (STM) and Razor Creek Dome (RCD); the east rim is along the Continental Divide, which defines the boundary with the older North Pass caldera farther to the east; and the south boundary also follows the Continental Divide where the Cochetopa Park caldera merges with the northern segment of the La Garita caldera. The northeast-trending Los Pinos graben formed at the time of collapse at La Garita, and the parallel Cochetopa graben, which breaches the north wall of La Garita caldera and forms a low segment of Cochetopa rim, is filled by thick tongue of Nelson Mountain Tuff. This lobe of densely welded tuff was channeled northeast from its eruptive source within the San Luis caldera complex at lower left of image, and flowed into the Cochetopa Park caldera where it thins to only a few meters of nonwelded tuff in the southeastern parts of the caldera basin. Other geographic localities: CC—upper Cochetopa Creek; CCn—Cochetopa Canyon (outlet from Cochetopa Park caldera, carved in Precambrian granitic rocks); CD—Cochetopa Dome (sequence of crystal-poor lava flows of petrologically evolved rhyolite that accumulated within Cochetopa caldera shortly after its collapse); LBB—Long Branch Baldy (high point along Continental Divide, where 33-Ma Bonanza Tuff banks against high-standing erosional remnants of a large andesitic stratocone); NP—North Pass (followed by Colorado Hwy 114); LPC—Los Pinos Creek; SaC—Saguache Canyon (outlet from La Garita caldera, carved in &gt;32-Ma intermediate-composition lavas, and inherited from Oligocene topography); SM—Sargents Mesa (high flat along the Continental Divide, locally capped by Bonanza Tuff); SP—Saguache Park (Carpenter Ridge and Wason Park Tuffs, banked against the northern La Garita caldera wall); TM—Table Mountain (high-standing erosional remnant of Nelson Mountain Tuff that ponded within the La Garita caldera).
Published: 01 July 2008
Figure 3. Oblique view ( Google Earth ), looking north at Cochetopa and North Pass calderas. The topographic rim of Cochetopa Park caldera (~30 km across) is morphologically well preserved (dashed white lines): along its northwest and north sides, high points on the rim are marked by Sawtooth
Image
Generalized geologic map and cross section, northeast San Juan region, based on recent geologic mapping (2000–2011). Some rock units grouped by caldera cycle: North Pass (NP); Cochetopa–Nelson Mountain (NM). Geographic localities: HH—Houghland Hill; HL—Houselog Creek; JC—Jacks Creek volcano; LBB—Long Branch Baldy; ML—Mount Lion; RCD—Razorback Dome; SaM—Sargents Mesa; SM—Sawtooth Mountain; TM—Trickle Mountain. The Nelson caldera is the youngest subsidence of the San Luis caldera complex. Dashed rectangular grid, boundaries of 7.5′ quadrangle maps. Generalized rift-related regional structural tilts (in green) are gentle (10°–20°). Green-dashed line, area of Cochetopa–North Pass caldera map (Lipman, 2012); Blue-dashed line, Bonanza map area (this study); red-dashed line, northeast corner of central San Juan map area (Lipman, 2006).
Published: 01 December 2015
Figure 2. Generalized geologic map and cross section, northeast San Juan region, based on recent geologic mapping (2000–2011). Some rock units grouped by caldera cycle: North Pass (NP); Cochetopa–Nelson Mountain (NM). Geographic localities: HH—Houghland Hill; HL—Houselog Creek; JC—Jacks Creek
Journal Article
Journal: Geosphere
Published: 01 October 2013
Geosphere (2013) 9 (5): 1125–1146.
... in the Sierra Crest graben-vent complex. At least half the slip on the north-south normal faults on the Sonora Pass range front occurred before and during eruption of the TML, prior to development of the Little Walker caldera. It has previously been suggested that the range-front faults formed a right-stepping...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Initiation of Sierra Nevada range front–Walker Lan...
Second thumbnail for: Initiation of Sierra Nevada range front–Walker Lan...
Third thumbnail for: Initiation of Sierra Nevada range front–Walker Lan...
Image
Figure 4. Photographs showing pre-Caetano caldera geology. (A) Chert-pebble conglomerate underlying caldera floor near Caetano Ranch in the northern Toiyabe Range. Rocks are thought to be part of the Pennsylvanian-Permian Antler Overlap sequence. Hammer is 46 cm long. (B) Middle Tertiary conglomerate forming caldera floor on northwest side of the Toiyabe Range. Well-lithified, non-calcareous conglomerate contains clasts of Paleozoic quartzite, chert, and argillite, Mesozoic(?) granite and diorite, and several textural types of Tertiary flow-banded rhyolite (Tr) up to 1.5 m in diameter. (C) View looking south along the crest of the north end of the Fish Creek Mountains. Questa in foreground is formed by flat-lying tuff of Cove Mine that fills a paleovalley. Higher part of range in background is comprised of Fish Creek Mountains Tuff that fills the younger Fish Creek Mountains caldera. (D) View north of Horse Mountain, Wilson Pass, and north margin of the Caetano caldera. Horse Mountain composed of Paleozoic quartzite and argillite (Pz). Caldera-bounding fault lies at base of talus slopes. Low area of Wilson Pass composed of poorly exposed mesobreccia (Tcb; Fig. 6D). Densely welded intracaldera Caetano Tuff (Tcc) forms ridge in foreground and dips ∼40° east (right).
Published: 01 February 2008
) View north of Horse Mountain, Wilson Pass, and north margin of the Caetano caldera. Horse Mountain composed of Paleozoic quartzite and argillite (Pz). Caldera-bounding fault lies at base of talus slopes. Low area of Wilson Pass composed of poorly exposed mesobreccia (Tcb; Fig. 6D ). Densely welded
Journal Article
Journal: Geosphere
Published: 01 August 2013
Geosphere (2013) 9 (4): 736–780.
.... This graben-vent system includes the following. 1. The north-northwest–south-southeast Sierra Crest graben proper consists of a single 28-km-long, 8–10-km-wide full graben that is along the modern Sierra Nevada crest between Sonora Pass and Ebbetts Pass (largely in the Carson-Iceberg Wilderness...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Sierra Crest graben-vent system: A Walker Lane pul...
Second thumbnail for: Sierra Crest graben-vent system: A Walker Lane pul...
Third thumbnail for: Sierra Crest graben-vent system: A Walker Lane pul...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 September 2012
GSA Bulletin (2012) 124 (9-10): 1562–1576.
... to investigate caldera structure in relation to the subsidence and erupted volume. In this paper, we use remote sensing, field analysis, and available subsurface data. At the surface, the caldera passes from a downsag (south rim) to a narrow and densely faulted area (north rim), with outer normal and inner...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: <span class="search-highlight">Caldera</span> stru...
Second thumbnail for: <span class="search-highlight">Caldera</span> stru...
Third thumbnail for: <span class="search-highlight">Caldera</span> stru...
Journal Article
Journal: Geosphere
Published: 01 February 2016
Geosphere (2016) 12 (1): 135–175.
... into a north-northwest Walker Lane trend by ca. 9 Ma, now exposed along the Sierran crest; and (3) the Mokelumne paleochannel was beheaded by ca. 6–5 Ma, and the Carson Pass–Kirkwood paleochannel several kilometers to the north was deranged from east-west into the north-northwest Hope Valley graben ca. 6 Ma...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Progressive derangement of ancient (Mesozoic) east...
Second thumbnail for: Progressive derangement of ancient (Mesozoic) east...
Third thumbnail for: Progressive derangement of ancient (Mesozoic) east...
Journal Article
Journal: Geosphere
Published: 07 August 2018
Geosphere (2018) 14 (5): 2068–2117.
... ) and as long-lived (∼3 m.y.) as the Pliocene to Holocene Long Valley transtensional rift volcanic field, which is also in the Walker Lane. The Ebbetts Pass volcanic center is the next major volcanic center to the north within the ancestral Cascades arc. It formed within a smaller pull-apart basin. Its...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: A tale of two Walker Lane pull-apart basins in the...
Second thumbnail for: A tale of two Walker Lane pull-apart basins in the...
Third thumbnail for: A tale of two Walker Lane pull-apart basins in the...
Image
Figure 14. Geologic map of the northern caldera margin at Wilson Pass (Goat Peak 7-½′ quadrangle). Caldera boundary probably consists of two west-northwest–striking, steeply dipping faults separating Paleozoic rocks north of the northern fault, mesobreccia between the two faults, and Caetano Tuff south of the southern fault (Figs. 4D and 7D). Paleozoic rocks at Peak 7268 may be megabreccia or part of caldera wall. Caetano Tuff overlies the caldera floor consisting of tuff of Cove Mine underlain by basalt lava flows. Miocene sedimentary rocks (Tm) were deposited in the hanging wall of the middle Miocene Redrock Canyon fault (Colgan et al., 2008).
Published: 01 February 2008
Figure 14. Geologic map of the northern caldera margin at Wilson Pass (Goat Peak 7-½′ quadrangle). Caldera boundary probably consists of two west-northwest–striking, steeply dipping faults separating Paleozoic rocks north of the northern fault, mesobreccia between the two faults, and Caetano Tuff
Journal Article
Published: 01 July 2007
The Journal of Geology (2007) 115 (4): 417–435.
... that record the evolution of the eruption from a buoyant plume (22 km) that deposited ∼0.2 km 3 of dacite magma as a pyroclastic fall layer to erupting ∼10–100 km 3 of andesitic magma as Scoria-rich pyroclastic falls and flows that were mainly deposited to the north and northwest of the caldera, including...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Eruption and Deposition of the Fisher Tuff (Alaska...
Second thumbnail for: Eruption and Deposition of the Fisher Tuff (Alaska...
Third thumbnail for: Eruption and Deposition of the Fisher Tuff (Alaska...
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 March 1977
Geology (1977) 5 (3): 173–176.
... of Aniakchak caldera, crossed a broad lowland with an altitude of less than 35 m, and continued on through passes as much as 260 m high in the Aleutian Range into the Pacific Ocean, a distance of some 50 km. North of Fisher caldera, ash flows flowed over a ridge barrier of 500 m and into the Bering Sea...
Image
Figure 13. Photographs showing breccias in the Caetano caldera. (A) Approximately 10-m-thick mesobreccia lens in lower unit of Caetano Tuff near south margin of caldera just north of Red Mountain. Mesobreccia composed of angular fragments (up to 50 cm) of Paleozoic quartzite, argillite, and chert, Tertiary andesite, and white pumice in matrix of finely ground Paleozoic rocks. Hammer is 46 cm long. (B) Interbedded coarse, clast-supported mesobreccia and lithic-rich Caetano Tuff near south margin of caldera north of Red Mountain. Blocks are mostly Paleozoic quartzite and argillite and locally reach 2 m in diameter. Hammer is 46 cm long. (C) Brecciated Paleozoic quartzite block in mesobreccia at Wilson Pass. Hammer is 55 cm long. (D) Large block of brecciated Paleozoic chert enclosed in Caetano Tuff near base of upper unit ∼0.5 km north of Tub Spring. Block is ∼5 m in maximum dimension and is ∼4 km from the nearest exposed caldera margin.
Published: 01 February 2008
Figure 13. Photographs showing breccias in the Caetano caldera. (A) Approximately 10-m-thick mesobreccia lens in lower unit of Caetano Tuff near south margin of caldera just north of Red Mountain. Mesobreccia composed of angular fragments (up to 50 cm) of Paleozoic quartzite, argillite, and chert
Series: GSA Field Guide
Published: 01 January 2008
DOI: 10.1130/2007.fld010(08)
EISBN: 9780813756103
..., turn left driving several miles north toward Mount Washburn and Dunraven Pass. For the first couple of miles, to the immediate east are post-caldera lavas that erupted shortly after the cataclysmic eruption of the Yellowstone caldera. These rhyolitic lavas (the Dunraven and Canyon flows of the Upper...
Series: GSA Field Guide
Published: 24 September 2021
DOI: 10.1130/2021.0062(08)
EISBN: 9780813756622
..., −117.2530) The road descends through a sequence of thick outcrops of intracaldera tuff facies including ignimbrite, surges, and fallout deposits of the tuff of Leslie Gulch within the Mahogany Mountain caldera. The intracaldera facies at Dago Gulch is cut by a number of north-striking rhyolite dikes...
Image
Figure 8. Schematic illustration of Hannegan caldera development. Units: Tc—Chilliwack Composite Batholith, undifferentiated; Thv—precaldera volcanic rocks; Ked—schist facies of the Easton metamorphic suite Darrington phyllite; r—differentiated volatilized rhyolite magma; ▵—wall-rock breccia, undifferentiated; Thh—ignimbrite of Hannegan Peak; Ths—intra-ignimbrite sedimentary rock; Thr—ignimbrite of Ruth Mountain; rhg—rhyolite of Hells Gorge; acd—andesite lavas of Chilliwack Pass; Tcid—Icy Peak pluton; Tcnm—Nook-sack Cirque pluton. (A) Rhyolitic magma differentiates at the top of a magma chamber with an asymmetrical upper surface. Basement is composed of Chilliwack batholith and Easton metamorphic suite rocks. Precaldera volcanic rocks are present. (B) 3.722 Ma: eruption of voluminous ignimbrite of Hannegan Peak, with down-to-the-north trap-door–style caldera collapse. A hinge or possibly a small-displacement fault borders the southern margin of the caldera. Wall rocks slide inboard. An ignimbrite outflow sheet is probably emplaced. (C) Period of sedimentation in localized lakes. The rhyolite of Hells Gorge intrudes caldera fill. Volatilized rhyolite magma continues to differentiate and accumulate in a new cupola resulting from initial trap-door collapse. (D) Ignimbrite of Ruth Mountain erupts during second-phase caldera collapse. First-phase trap-door block rotates downward to the south as the ring fault propagates around the southern portion of the caldera; caldera walls shed breccia lenses. (E) Devolatilized remnant magma is intruded into ring faults and forms pods. Less-evolved magmas also intrude as dikes and pods. Andesite of Cassiope Dome intrudes both ignimbrites and deforms Ths. Icy Peak pluton rises into the southwest margin of the caldera, followed shortly by the adjacent Nooksack Cirque pluton. They may send dikes to the surface. Andesite of Chilliwack Pass is erupted by 2.96 Ma. (F) Modern erosional surface develops, after removal of at least 1 km of caldera fill, exposing deep levels of the caldera fill and the postcaldera plutons.
Published: 01 March 2007
with an asymmetrical upper surface. Basement is composed of Chilliwack batholith and Easton metamorphic suite rocks. Precaldera volcanic rocks are present. (B) 3.722 Ma: eruption of voluminous ignimbrite of Hannegan Peak, with down-to-the-north trap-door–style caldera collapse. A hinge or possibly a small-displacement