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Riverdale Fault
Reinterpreted history of latest Pleistocene Lake Bonneville: Geologic setting of threshold failure, Bonneville flood, deltas of the Bear River, and outlets for two Provo shorelines, southeastern Idaho, USA Available to Purchase
Abstract Geologic, geomorphic, and geophysical analyses of landforms, sediments, and geologic structures document the complex history of pluvial Lake Bonneville in northern Cache Valley, NE Great Basin, and shows that the outlet of Lake Bonneville shifted ~20 km south after the Bonneville flood. The Riverdale normal fault offsets Bonneville deposits, but not younger Provo deposits ~25 km southeast of Zenda, Idaho. Rapid changes in water level may have induced slip on the Riverdale fault shortly before, during, or after the Bonneville flood. Although other processes may have played a role, seismicity might have been the main cause of the Bonneville flood. The outlet of Lake Bonneville shifted south from Zenda first 11, then another 12 km, during the Provo occupation. The subsequent Holocene establishment of the drainage divide at Red Rock Pass, south of Zenda, resulted from an alluvial fan damming the north-sloping valley. Weak Neogene sediments formed sills for the three overflowing stages of the lake, including the pre-flood highstand. Field trip stops on flood-modified landslide deposits overlook two outflow channels, examine and discuss the conglomerate-bearing sedimentary deposits that formed the dam of Lake Bonne ville, sapping-related landforms, and the Holocene alluvial fan that produced the modern drainage divide at Red Rock Pass. The flood scoured ~25 km of Cache and Marsh Valleys, initiated modest-sized landslides, and cut a channel north of a new sill near Swan Lake. Lake Bonneville dropped ~100 m and stablilized south of this sill at the main, higher ~4775 ± 10 ft (1456 ± 3 m) Provo shoreline. Later Lake Bonneville briefly stabilized at a lower ~4745 ± 10 ft (1447 ± 3 m) Provo sill, near Clifton, Idaho, 12 km farther south. An abandoned meandering riverbed in Round Valley, Idaho, shows major flow of the large Bonneville River northward from the Clifton sill. Field trip stops at both sills and overlooking the meander belt examine some of the field evidence for these shorelines and sills. The Bear River, which enters Cache Valley at the mouth of Oneida Narrows, 17 km ENE of the Clifton sill, was the main source of water in Lake Bonneville. It produced 3 sets of deltas in Cache Valley—a major delta during the Bonneville highstand, a larger composite delta during occupation of two Provo shorelines, and at least one smaller delta during recession from the Provo shoreline. The Bonneville delta and most of the Provo delta of the Bear River were subaqueous in Cache Valley, based on their topsets being lower than the coeval shorelines. The Bonneville delta is deeply dissected by closely spaced gullies that formed immediately after the Bonneville flood. The delta morphologies change sequentially from river-dominated to wave-dominated, then back to river-dominated. These unique shapes and the brief, intense erosion of the Bonneville delta record temporal changes in wave energy, erosion, vegetation, and/or storminess, at the end of the Pleistocene. Stops on a delta near Weston, Idaho, reveal many of the distinguishing features of the much larger deltas of the Bear River in a smaller, more concentrated form. We will see and discuss the ubiquitous gully erosion in Bonneville landforms, the nearly undissected Provo delta, the subaqueous topset of the Provo delta, and the wave-cut and wave-built benches and notches at the upper and lower Provo shorelines.
New insights into the outlet conditions of late Pleistocene Lake Bonneville, southeastern Idaho, USA Open Access
Reconstructed surfaces in southern Marsh Valley before the Bonneville flood... Open Access
Key features of northern Cache Valley and southern Marsh Valley. Numbered s... Open Access
Topographic map of northern Cache Valley shows part of the Bonneville delta... Open Access
Aerial photograph shows abandoned meander belt in Round Valley with numerou... Open Access
Digital-elevation model of deltaic landforms in northern Cache Valley south... Open Access
Map of lake levels within Cache Valley. Deltas of the Bear River are differ... Open Access
California Exploration and Development in 1941 Available to Purchase
Stratigraphic Relations of Upper Cretaceous in Great Valley, California Available to Purchase
On the selection of station sites for observing strain steps and earthquake forerunners in California Available to Purchase
Oil Development Activities in California, 1942 Available to Purchase
Reef Development on a Mid-Oceanic Island: Reflection Profiling Studies of the 500-Meter Shelf South of Oahu Available to Purchase
Oil and Gas Developments in West Coast in 1987 Available to Purchase
The geochemical evolution of the Logan Igneous Suite, Ontario, Canada: new insights from the Logan Basin and implications for the genesis of the Mesoproterozoic Midcontinent Rift System Available to Purchase
Abstract The 1.1 Ga Midcontinent Rift System (MRS) of North America comprises a series of Mesoproterozoic flood basalts and intrusive rocks emplaced in the Lake Superior region. The mafic rocks preserved on the NW flank of Lake Superior offer insights into the early development of the rift. New geochemical data collected from intrusive rocks in the Logan Basin, coupled with improved constraints on timing relationships between units, allow for a better understanding of the geochemical evolution of intrusive rocks therein. The extensive dataset suggests many previously unrecognized relationships between MRS intrusive rocks, indicating multiple, distinct mantle-source characteristics with highly variable crustal contamination histories, implying a complicated magma plumbing system. The data presented here suggest that five geochemically distinct mantle source regions were involved in the emplacement of the Logan Igneous Suite, each with its own distinct contamination history and perhaps different degrees of partial melting. The geochemical variations could suggest either a progressive, relative depletion in the mantle source over time or heterogeneity of the source region. However, based on the model for MRS magmatism presented here, we suggest that units related to the Logan Igneous Suite were tapping a heterogeneous mantle source that varied over time.