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Rattlesnake Canyon

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Journal Article
Published: 01 November 1987
Environmental & Engineering Geoscience (1987) xxiv (4): 549–555.
...NEWELL CAMPBELL Abstract Geologic mapping of lower Rattlesnake Creek Canyon in south-central Washington shows the potential for future landsliding at the proposed Mile 4 damsite. Lower Rattlesnake Canyon is cut into north-dipping flows of the Columbia River Basalt Group (Miocene). Past failure...
Image
Published: 01 January 2016
Figure 1. Study area. (A) Location of the Guadalupe Mountains in the schematic map of the United States (yellow box), elevation map of the Guadalupe Mountains, and location of the main canyons (Walnut, Rattlesnake, Slaughter, Double, Big, and McKittrick). Location of the study area in Rattlesnake
Image
Published: 01 September 2010
Figure 11 Interpretation of fracture linkage with buried faults along lower Walnut Canyon based upon recent work on vertically extensive exposures of the underlying Yates Formation in Slaughter, west Walnut, and Rattlesnake canyons by Koša and Hunt ( 2005 , 2006a , b ).
Image
Published: 01 August 1929
Fig. 6. [Grey Scale] Juxtaposition of Castile gypsum (on creek bank) and Capitan limestone (hills on right). Looking southwest from mouth of Rattlesnake Canyon, T. 25 S., R. 24 E.
Image
Published: 01 July 1937
Fig. 2. —Map of the exposed portion of the Capitan reef. Stippled area represents the outcrop of Carlsbad limestone which blankets the Capitan limestone beneath it. The Capitan limestone is to be seen only in the canyons and along the reef front west of Rattlesnake Canyon, in the Guadalupe scarp
Image
Published: 01 August 2008
shonkinites and melasyenites from Mineral Hill. The Mountain Pass felsic rocks also include Mineral Hill samples. Other mafic rocks include shonkinites and melasyenites from Mesquite Lake, New Trail Canyon, Ivanpah, Bobcat Hills, Barrel Spring, and Rattlesnake Canyon.
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Published: 01 June 2015
) in Rattlesnake Canyon, Burns, Oregon. Vertical columnar joints at top are obscured by fine fracturing as they pass downward.
Image
Published: 01 May 2005
Figure 9 Regional well-log cross section A-A'. This cross section extends from the Soldier Creek area in the northwest to the Rattlesnake Canyon area in the southeast ( Fig. 1 ). Well names are given. Depth markers are in feet. The datum is the top of the Castlegate Sandstone. Grassy Member
Image
Published: 08 November 2019
Figure 6. Vertical separation (VS) along the southern 8 km of Warm Springs section. (A) 1983 VS measured in this study (red) compared to those of Crone et al. (1987) (blue) for the 1983 surface rupture. RC shows displacement measured at the Rattlesnake Canyon trench (Schwartz, written
Image
Published: 01 August 2008
Spring shonkinite and melasyenite compared with average lamproite. E. Barrel Spring and Rattlesnake Canyon syenites and quartz syenites compared with average lamproite. F. Mountain Pass carbonatite compared with average lamproite and with average Mountain Pass – Mineral Hill shonkinite and melasyenite.
Image
Published: 01 April 2017
to depositional dip showing true-scale shelf-to-basin clinoform pattern and key stratigraphic units of the north wall of McKittrick Canyon. (C) Geologic interpretation of north wall of Rattlesnake Canyon showing peritidal shelf crest (tan), sandstone (yellow), foreshore/upper shoreface grainstone (red), shallow
Image
Published: 16 February 2022
earthquake. White circles show paleoseismic sites along the Lost River fault zone considered in this study. RC—Rattlesnake Canyon; SC—Sheep Creek; 25K—25 km trench; AG—Arentson Gulch; PS—Poison Spring; DP—Doublespring Pass; EC—Elkhorn Creek; LCC—Lone Cedar Creek; LWC—Lower Cedar Creek. Additional sites
Image
Published: 08 November 2019
at the Willow Creek Hills, compared to (B) WS PE1, which possibly continued across the structure. The southern extent of WS PE1 and WS PE2 are poorly resolved. Paleoseismic displacements for WS PE1 are from the Rattlesnake Canyon (RC) and Sheep Creek (SC) trenches (see text for discussion). The Thousand Springs
Image
Published: 06 May 2020
Figure 16. Bobcat Canyon, Snively Basin. See Figure 15 for location and map symbols. (A) Geologic map of Bobcat Canyon. Erosion has exposed the Rattlesnake Mountain anticline (white anticline symbol) thrusted over by Rattlesnake Hills thrust fault. This is the termination and last structural
Image
Published: 16 February 2022
the U.S. Geological Survey (2020) ; the 1983 rupture trace (red) is modified from Crone et al. (1987) and DuRoss et al. (2019) . Heavy gray dashed line shows simplified fault trace to which site data are projected in lower panel. Trench site abbreviations are included in Figure 1 . RC—Rattlesnake
Image
Published: 01 June 1933
Fig. 3. —View eastward through canyon cut by Shoshone River across Rattlesnake Mountain “anticline.”
Series: GSA Field Guide
Published: 18 May 2020
DOI: 10.1130/2020.0059(03)
EISBN: 9780813756592
...; Fig. 3 ). Large landslides occurred upstream in Rattlesnake Canyon, probably forming temporary natural dams across the creek. As these dams were overtopped and eroded, mud and boulders “burst out” and carried the boulders downstream as a debris flow. The boulders are deposited when the flow spreads...
FIGURES | View All (17)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 October 1958
AAPG Bulletin (1958) 42 (10): 2378–2398.
... front of Trout Creek Spur south of Willow Creek; along the west front of the range northwest of the abandoned town of Red Butte; on the south side of Rattlesnake Canyon at the west front of the range; along the road to Navajo Peak just below the peak; and on the low hills about 3 miles south-southeast...
FIGURES | View All (10)
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 October 1957
GSA Bulletin (1957) 68 (10): 1315–1342.
..., with a massive quartzite member, and two granite intrusives: the foliated Sheep Canyon Granite which is a small synkinematic stock, and the nonfoliated Rattlesnake Point Granite which is a large postkinematic intrusive. All these units are cut by Precambrian aplite dikes. The Paleozoic strata have an aggregate...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 April 2017
AAPG Bulletin (2017) 101 (4): 465–474.
... to depositional dip showing true-scale shelf-to-basin clinoform pattern and key stratigraphic units of the north wall of McKittrick Canyon. (C) Geologic interpretation of north wall of Rattlesnake Canyon showing peritidal shelf crest (tan), sandstone (yellow), foreshore/upper shoreface grainstone (red), shallow...
FIGURES | View All (4)