Field Excursions from Las Vegas, Nevada: Guides to the 2022 GSA Cordilleran and Rocky Mountain Joint Section Meeting
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Prepared in conjunction with the 2022 GSA Cordilleran/Rocky Mountain Sections Joint Meeting, this Field Guide showcases trips to geologically interesting areas in Arizona, Nevada, and California. Enjoy a three-day trip to the Buckskin-Rawhide and northern Plomosa Mountains metamorphic core complexes in Arizona. In Nevada, learn about the geology of Frenchman Mountain and Rainbow Gardens and landslide deposits and mechanisms in the eastern Spring Mountains. Or learn about microbialites in Miocene and modern lakes near Las Vegas. When weather permits, unravel the geological history of southern Death Valley, and explore vertebrate paleontology and Cenozoic depositional environments in Death Valley, California.
Microbialites right under our noses: Miocene and modern lakes near Las Vegas, Nevada, USA Available to Purchase
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Published:March 14, 2022
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CiteCitation
Thomas A. Hickson, Kevin M. Theissen, Melissa A. Lamb, 2022. "Microbialites right under our noses: Miocene and modern lakes near Las Vegas, Nevada, USA", Field Excursions from Las Vegas, Nevada: Guides to the 2022 GSA Cordilleran and Rocky Mountain Joint Section Meeting, Ganqing Jiang, Carol Dehler
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ABSTRACT
On this field trip, we will examine a modern lake in central Nevada, the Lower Pahranagat Lake, and lacustrine carbonate outcrops of the late Miocene, upper Horse Spring Formation. Both of the modern and ancient systems hold significant microbialite populations and we interpret that the Lower Pahranagat Lake is a possible analog for the ancient unit. Both systems are or were spring-fed from a similar Paleozoic carbonate aquifer. Both have evidence of microbially influenced sedimentation, probably related to spring activity. Both are dominated by the deposition of carbonate to the exclusion of nearly all siliciclastic material. In the Lower Pahranagat Lake, we will focus on the Holocene depositional record of the lake and the microbialites that are found therein. Molecular genetic data from three sites near the Lower Pahranagat Lake suggest that carbonate deposition could be strongly mediated by varying and complex microbial communities, and that simple interpretations of carbonate geochemistry probably neglect this influence. In the Lake Mead area, we will examine both the vertical (stratigraphic) and lateral relationships between a wide diversity of microbial macro- and mesostructures, to critically evaluate the relative effects of climate change, variable lake chemistry, and the role of microbial mat metabolisms on microbialite geochemistry.