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Roseburg Formation

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Published: 01 January 1981
DOI: 10.1130/SPE184-p85
... Microfossils recovered from the Roseburg, Lookingglass, and Flournoy Formations (Umpqua Group) of southwest Oregon include 33 species and subspecies of planktonic foraminifers. Some of the faunas from these units include as many as 14 species per sample, and specimen preservation is moderate...
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 February 1981
Geology (1981) 9 (2): 81–86.
... of the Mesozoic graywackes comprised part of the felsic component of the source terrane. A mafic source is also required by chemical, isotopic, and mineralogic features of the Flournoy graywackes. This was probably equivalent to basalts in the Paleocene and Eocene Roseburg Formation beneath the Flournoy...
Image
—Comparison of terminology and contact relations of stratigraphic units use...
Published: 01 August 1985
Figure 2 —Comparison of terminology and contact relations of stratigraphic units used in this report with units of previous investigators. Thicknesses are those at or near areas where formations were originally named. Roseburg Formation of Baldwin (1974) includes as much as 8,000 ft (2,450 m
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 August 1985
AAPG Bulletin (1985) 69 (8): 1217–1229.
...Figure 2 —Comparison of terminology and contact relations of stratigraphic units used in this report with units of previous investigators. Thicknesses are those at or near areas where formations were originally named. Roseburg Formation of Baldwin (1974) includes as much as 8,000 ft (2,450 m...
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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 30 June 1935
GSA Bulletin (1935) 46 (6): 961–972.
...) is underlain by the Umpqua formation, a series of interbedded sandstones . . . † Published by permission of the Director, U. S. Geological Survey. 1 J. S. Biller: Description of the Roseburg quadrangle [Oreg.], U. S. Geol. Surv., Geol. Atlas, Roseburg folio, no. 49 (1898) p. 3. 2 F. G...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 December 1959
AAPG Bulletin (1959) 43 (12): 2770–2785.
... sequence of sandstone, shale, conglomerate, and some limestone exposed in the southern part of the Roseburg Quadrangle, Oregon. The formation was named after the valley of Myrtle Creek, although Diller did not specify a type locality. He noted that the exposures of the formation in that valley...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal: Geosphere
Published: 01 August 2014
Geosphere (2014) 10 (4): 692–719.
... (Canada) to Roseburg, Oregon ( Fig. 1 ). These volcanic complexes include the Siletz River Volcanics (SRV) of Oregon, the Crescent Formation of Washington, and the Metchosin igneous complex of southern Vancouver Island. They are composed dominantly of tholeiitic and alkalic submarine and subaerial basalt...
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Image
—Generalized cross sections from southwestern Oregon to northern Washington...
Published: 01 July 1978
Fig. 1 —Generalized cross sections from southwestern Oregon to northern Washington. Heavy lines mark time-stratigraphic boundaries. Light lines mark boundaries between volcanic (Crescent, Siletz River, Roseburg, Teanaway), fine-clastic (Yamill, McIntosh), and coarse-clastic (Bateman, Flournoy
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 July 1978
AAPG Bulletin (1978) 62 (7): 1193–1197.
...Fig. 1 —Generalized cross sections from southwestern Oregon to northern Washington. Heavy lines mark time-stratigraphic boundaries. Light lines mark boundaries between volcanic (Crescent, Siletz River, Roseburg, Teanaway), fine-clastic (Yamill, McIntosh), and coarse-clastic (Bateman, Flournoy...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 November 1983
AAPG Bulletin (1983) 67 (11): 2100–2116.
... and associated deformed sediments (Roseburg Formation) suggest accretionary wedge development during the early Eocene in the present Oregon Coast Range. Based on paleomagnetic evidence, tectonic rotation models of 50° to 75° east of north have been proposed ( Simpson and Cox, 1977 ; Beck and Plumley, 1980...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 May 1951
AAPG Bulletin (1951) 35 (5): 1052–1061.
...Parke D Snavely, Jr.; Weldon W. Rau; Lin Hoover, Jr.; Albert E. Roberts Abstract The name McIntosh formation is proposed for more than 4,000-4,500 feet of dark gray marine siltstone and claystone, and interbedded arkosic and basaltic sandstone which crops out in the Centralia-Chehalis coal district...
FIGURES | View All (6)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 October 1957
AAPG Bulletin (1957) 41 (10): 2284–2297.
... Coast Ranges. In Roseburg Quadrangle, Oregon, similar foraminiferal limestone is part of the Myrtle formation and was termed Whitsett limestone by Diller ( 1898 ). These bodies of limestone characteristically contain local thinly interbedded chert layers, tuffaceous layers or scattered volcanic debris...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Published: 01 April 2006
Earth Sciences History (2006) 25 (1): 37–55.
... post-graduate studies at Harvard and Heildelberg, specializing in petrology, where he acquired a mentor in the pioneering petrologist Heinrich Rosenbusch (1836– 1914). While at Heidelberg he participated in an archeological expedition to Turkey. 4 In this expedition he defined a series of formations...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 July 1961
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (1961) 51 (3): 337–354.
... of the Franciscan complex has been made by Taliaferro (1943). Extracts from his work describe the extent of this formation: "The Franciscan is widely distributed in the Coast Ranges of California and southwestern Oregon from Santa Barbara County northward to Roseburg, Oregon, where it disappears beneath the eocene...
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 1919
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (1919) 9 (3): 59–71.
... is gained in this world by denying per- fectly patent facts. Another reason for undertaking this little study is the light it will throw on the geologic structure of Oregon antl on the seismic investi- gations in the neighboring states of California and Washington. Geo- logic formations and phenomena...
Image
Figure 3. Pattern of Mesozoic–Cenozoic accretionary tectonic belts flanking...
Published: 01 April 2008
Cove Formations; CM—metavolcanic rind of CMW; CoB—Coastal Belt Franciscan (see Figs. 5 and 6 ); CS—Colebrook (∼Pickett Peak) Schist; DF—Dothan-Franciscan subduction complex; EH—Eastern Hayfork belt; GVG—Great Valley Group; HC—Happy Camp window; Hf—Hornbrook Formation; MG—Myrtle Group; NF—North Fork
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 February 1951
AAPG Bulletin (1951) 35 (2): 193–199.
... in windows in the regional cover of Tertiary volcanic rocks. Whether the Cretaceous or any of the older marine formations underlie the Tertiary of the Coast Range Province can only be conjectured, but it is reasonable to suppose that they were deposited in this region, and that remnants of them still remain...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal: Lithosphere
Publisher: GSW
Published: 25 May 2017
Lithosphere (2017) 9 (4): 652–664.
... preferred dates for igneous samples represent weighted means. Uncertainties are reported in the format ±X/Y/Z in Table 1 , where X represents the analytical uncertainty, Y includes uncertainty in the isotopic tracer calibration, and Z represents the full uncertainty and includes uncertainty in the 238 U...
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Journal Article
Journal: Geosphere
Published: 01 April 2014
Geosphere (2014) 10 (2): 264–275.
... Basalt Group (CRBG) and younger fluvial deposits. Popowski (1996) used potential field and seismic reflection data to interpret a two-stage history of the Tualatin basin, with early, left-lateral shear accommodating block rotation and basin formation. In Blakely et al. (2000) , high-resolution...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 June 1955
AAPG Bulletin (1955) 39 (6): 1068–1091.
.... Continental Oil Company’s E. A. Sims Royalty-1 (D on index map) was completed, flowing 50 MCF per day dry methane gas from a 22-foot interval (2,571–2,593 feet) of tight sand in the Astoria formation of lower Miocene age. Although this discovery is non-commercial, it was the result of Continental’s...
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