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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Asia
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Himalayas
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Nanga Parbat (1)
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Indian Peninsula
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Jammu and Kashmir
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Kashmir (1)
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Nanga Parbat (1)
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Pakistan (1)
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Indus River (1)
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Karakoram (1)
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Blue Mountains (3)
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Cascade Range (12)
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Cascadia subduction zone (4)
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Channeled Scabland (2)
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Coast Ranges (3)
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Columbia River (4)
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Crater Lake (1)
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Deschutes River (1)
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North America
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Basin and Range Province
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Great Basin (1)
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North American Cordillera (1)
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Pacific Coast (2)
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Salmon River (1)
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United States
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California
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Modoc Plateau (1)
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Yolla Bolly Terrane (1)
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Columbia Plateau (7)
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Great Basin (1)
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Hayfork Terrane (1)
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Idaho
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Idaho County Idaho (1)
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Klamath Mountains (1)
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Oregon
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Baker County Oregon (1)
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Clackamas County Oregon (3)
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Clatsop County Oregon (2)
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Columbia County Oregon (1)
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Crook County Oregon (2)
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Deschutes County Oregon
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Newberry Volcano (3)
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Gilliam County Oregon (1)
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Grant County Oregon (1)
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Harney County Oregon
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Steens Mountain (1)
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Hood River County Oregon (4)
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Jackson County Oregon (1)
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Jefferson County Oregon (1)
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Josephine County Oregon (1)
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Klamath County Oregon
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Mount Mazama (1)
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Lake County Oregon (3)
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Lane County Oregon (2)
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Lincoln County Oregon (2)
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Mount Hood (2)
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Multnomah County Oregon
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Portland Oregon (3)
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Tillamook County Oregon (1)
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Umatilla County Oregon (1)
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Union County Oregon (1)
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Wallowa County Oregon (1)
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Willamette River (1)
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Willamette Valley (3)
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Sevier orogenic belt (1)
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Walker Lane (1)
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Washington
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Chelan County Washington (1)
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Clark County Washington
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Vancouver Washington (2)
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Cowlitz County Washington (1)
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Grant County Washington (1)
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Grays Harbor County Washington (1)
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King County Washington (1)
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Kittitas County Washington (1)
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Pacific County Washington (2)
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Skamania County Washington
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Mount Saint Helens (2)
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Toutle River (1)
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Wahkiakum County Washington (1)
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Western U.S. (2)
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commodities
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geothermal energy (1)
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elements, isotopes
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carbon
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C-14 (1)
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halogens
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chlorine
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Cl-36 (1)
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isotopes
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radioactive isotopes
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C-14 (1)
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Cl-36 (1)
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geochronology methods
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Ar/Ar (1)
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exposure age (1)
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optically stimulated luminescence (1)
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thermoluminescence (1)
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U/Pb (1)
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geologic age
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Cenozoic
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Quaternary
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Holocene
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lower Holocene (1)
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upper Holocene (1)
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Mazama Ash (1)
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Pleistocene
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Lake Missoula (3)
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upper Pleistocene
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Wisconsinan
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upper Wisconsinan (1)
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upper Quaternary (1)
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Tertiary
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John Day Formation (1)
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Neogene
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Miocene
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Columbia River Basalt Group (6)
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Grande Ronde Basalt (1)
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Saddle Mountains Basalt (1)
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Wanapum Basalt (1)
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Pliocene (1)
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Paleogene
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Eocene
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Chumstick Formation (1)
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Clarno Formation (1)
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middle Eocene
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Tyee Formation (1)
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Swauk Formation (2)
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Mesozoic
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Condrey Mountain Schist (1)
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Cretaceous (2)
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Jurassic
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Upper Jurassic
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Josephine Ophiolite (1)
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Triassic
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Upper Triassic (1)
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igneous rocks
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igneous rocks
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plutonic rocks
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ultramafics
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peridotites (1)
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volcanic rocks
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basalts
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flood basalts (5)
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glasses
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obsidian (1)
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pyroclastics
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pumice (1)
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rhyolite tuff (1)
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scoria (2)
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tuff (2)
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ophiolite (1)
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volcanic ash (2)
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metamorphic rocks
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metamorphic rocks
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gneisses (1)
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metavolcanic rocks (1)
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ophiolite (1)
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turbidite (1)
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minerals
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silicates
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orthosilicates
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nesosilicates
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zircon group
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zircon (1)
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Primary terms
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absolute age (3)
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Asia
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Himalayas
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Nanga Parbat (1)
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Indian Peninsula
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Jammu and Kashmir
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Kashmir (1)
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Nanga Parbat (1)
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Pakistan (1)
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Indus River (1)
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Karakoram (1)
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carbon
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C-14 (1)
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Cenozoic
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Quaternary
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Holocene
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lower Holocene (1)
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upper Holocene (1)
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Mazama Ash (1)
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Pleistocene
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Lake Missoula (3)
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upper Pleistocene
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Wisconsinan
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upper Wisconsinan (1)
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upper Quaternary (1)
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Tertiary
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John Day Formation (1)
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Neogene
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Miocene
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Columbia River Basalt Group (6)
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Grande Ronde Basalt (1)
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Saddle Mountains Basalt (1)
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Wanapum Basalt (1)
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Pliocene (1)
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Paleogene
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Eocene
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Chumstick Formation (1)
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Clarno Formation (1)
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middle Eocene
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Tyee Formation (1)
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Swauk Formation (2)
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climate change (1)
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crust (1)
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dams (1)
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deformation (2)
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earthquakes (4)
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ecology (1)
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faults (11)
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folds (3)
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geochemistry (3)
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geochronology (1)
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geomorphology (15)
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geophysical methods (2)
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geothermal energy (1)
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glacial geology (1)
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ground water (5)
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hydrology (6)
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igneous rocks
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plutonic rocks
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ultramafics
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peridotites (1)
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-
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volcanic rocks
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basalts
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flood basalts (5)
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glasses
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obsidian (1)
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pyroclastics
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pumice (1)
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rhyolite tuff (1)
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scoria (2)
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tuff (2)
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intrusions (2)
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isotopes
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radioactive isotopes
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C-14 (1)
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Cl-36 (1)
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land use (2)
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lava (1)
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Mesozoic
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Condrey Mountain Schist (1)
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Cretaceous (2)
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Jurassic
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Upper Jurassic
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Josephine Ophiolite (1)
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Triassic
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Upper Triassic (1)
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metamorphic rocks
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gneisses (1)
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metavolcanic rocks (1)
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metamorphism (1)
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North America
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Basin and Range Province
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Great Basin (1)
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North American Cordillera (1)
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orogeny (1)
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Pacific Coast (2)
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paleogeography (1)
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plate tectonics (3)
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roads (1)
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sedimentary rocks (2)
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sedimentary structures
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bedding plane irregularities
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dune structures (1)
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soft sediment deformation
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olistostromes (1)
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sedimentation (3)
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sediments
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clastic sediments
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colluvium (1)
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erratics (1)
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loess (1)
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till (1)
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shorelines (2)
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slope stability (3)
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soil mechanics (1)
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springs (2)
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structural analysis (3)
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structural geology (1)
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tectonics
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neotectonics (4)
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thermal waters (1)
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United States
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California
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Modoc Plateau (1)
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Trinity Complex (1)
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Yolla Bolly Terrane (1)
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Columbia Plateau (7)
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Great Basin (1)
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Hayfork Terrane (1)
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Idaho
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Idaho County Idaho (1)
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Klamath Mountains (1)
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Oregon
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Baker County Oregon (1)
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Clackamas County Oregon (3)
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Clatsop County Oregon (2)
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Columbia County Oregon (1)
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Crook County Oregon (2)
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Deschutes County Oregon
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Newberry Volcano (3)
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Gilliam County Oregon (1)
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Grant County Oregon (1)
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Harney County Oregon
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Steens Mountain (1)
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Hood River County Oregon (4)
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Jackson County Oregon (1)
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Jefferson County Oregon (1)
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Josephine County Oregon (1)
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Klamath County Oregon
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Mount Mazama (1)
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Lake County Oregon (3)
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Lane County Oregon (2)
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Lincoln County Oregon (2)
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Mount Hood (2)
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Multnomah County Oregon
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Portland Oregon (3)
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Tillamook County Oregon (1)
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Umatilla County Oregon (1)
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Union County Oregon (1)
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Wallowa County Oregon (1)
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Willamette River (1)
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Willamette Valley (3)
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Sevier orogenic belt (1)
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Walker Lane (1)
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Washington
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Chelan County Washington (1)
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Clark County Washington
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Vancouver Washington (2)
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Cowlitz County Washington (1)
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Grant County Washington (1)
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Grays Harbor County Washington (1)
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King County Washington (1)
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Kittitas County Washington (1)
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Pacific County Washington (2)
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Skamania County Washington
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Mount Saint Helens (2)
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Toutle River (1)
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Wahkiakum County Washington (1)
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Western U.S. (2)
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-
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rock formations
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Riggins Group (1)
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Skagit Gneiss (1)
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sedimentary rocks
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sedimentary rocks (2)
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turbidite (1)
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volcaniclastics (1)
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sedimentary structures
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channels (2)
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sedimentary structures
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bedding plane irregularities
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dune structures (1)
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soft sediment deformation
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olistostromes (1)
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sediments
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sediments
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clastic sediments
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alluvium (1)
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colluvium (1)
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erratics (1)
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loess (1)
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till (1)
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turbidite (1)
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volcaniclastics (1)
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The Mount Hood fault zone, active faulting at the crest of the dynamic Cascade Range, north-central Oregon, USA
ABSTRACT The Mount Hood fault zone is a N-trending, ~55-km-long zone of active faulting along the western margin of the Hood River graben in north-central Oregon. The Mount Hood fault zone occurs along the crest of the Cascade Range and consists of multiple active fault segments. It is presently unclear how much Hood River graben extension is actively accommodated on the fault zone, and how Cascade intra-arc extension accommodates regional patterns of clockwise rotation and northwest translation of crustal blocks in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. Evidence for Holocene activity on the Mount Hood fault zone was discovered in 2009 after acquisition of high-resolution lidar topography of the area. This trip will visit sites displaying evidence of Holocene surface rupture on fault strands within the Mount Hood fault zone. Day 1 starts with a two-hour drive from Portland to Mount Hood, a 3429-m-high glaciated active volcano, where we will visit sites south of the summit along the Twin Lakes fault segment, including several fault scarps and two sites where dating of offset buried soils constrains the timing of the most recent surface-rupturing event to the Holocene. Day 1 includes two hikes of ~1 km and will be partly cross-country. The trip will overnight at the historic Timberline Lodge, an architectural masterpiece from the Civilian Conservation Corps (1933–1942) era, located at tree line on the southern flank of Mount Hood. Day 2 will visit sites north of the summit, stopping along the Blue Ridge fault segment to view the site of 2011 paleoseismic trenches and an offset glacial moraine. We will visit an unusual uphill-facing scarp in coarse talus along the Gate Creek fault segment near the north end of the Mount Hood fault zone. We will conclude Day 2 with a short hike into the Mark O. Hatfield Wilderness along the Gate Creek fault segment to view evidence of a surface-rupturing earthquake that occurred only a few centuries ago, illuminated by a nearby paleoseismic trench hand-dug in 2020. Our neotectonic and paleoseismic data are among the first efforts to document and characterize seismic sources within the Mount Hood fault zone. However, even with our new age data, fault slip rates and earthquake recurrence remain poorly constrained. With our limited earthquake timing data, it is not clear whether all segments of the Mount Hood fault zone rupture together as a ≥ M 7 earthquake, or alternatively, if the fault segments rupture independently in a sequence of smaller ~M 6–sized events.
Active dextral strike-slip faulting records termination of the Walker Lane belt at the southern Cascade arc in the Klamath graben, Oregon, USA
Shallow landslides are significant natural hazards in Oregon, and identification of areas susceptible to future landslides is a critical step in reducing risk. Recent advances in identification of areas susceptible to shallow landslides are mostly based on geographic information system (GIS) calculations of the slope stability using the infinite slope equation. This technique was further improved with high-resolution light detection and ranging (LiDAR)–based digital elevation models (DEM) converted to very accurate slope data as input into the GIS models. However, these models still underestimate and overestimate the susceptibility in certain areas compared to past landslide events and field observations. One significant overestimation we noted occurs in regionally flat areas with isolated steep slopes that have very little relief. We developed a method to remove these isolated overestimated areas using a neighborhood analysis with a maximum relief of 1.22 m (4 ft). Because landslides that originate on the steep slope may extend back into the flat area above the slope, or out onto the flat area at the toe of the slope, we applied a 9 m (30 ft) buffer (twice our defined depth to failure for shallow landslides) for all of the areas with a calculated factor of safety (FOS) less than 1.5. We tested the methods on three landslide inventory databases examining two main criteria: (1) capture rate (overall and individual landslides) and (2) reduction in total map area susceptibility coverage while maintaining a high capture rate. We found the two methods maintained a capture rate between 90% and 99% while at the same time reducing the total map area susceptibility zones from 64% to 42%.
Neotectonic analysis of Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon: New insights from seismic reflection data
We present marine high-resolution seismic reflection data from Upper Klamath Lake, Oregon, to discern the underlying structure and estimate Quaternary slip rates in this actively extending Basin and Range system. The sediment patterns and structures imaged on our seismic profiles reveal a complex geologic system that reflects a changing climate record, shallow water conditions, growth faulting, contrasting sediment sources, and high slip rates. We observe that Upper Klamath Lake is a sediment-saturated environment, and sediment accumulation rates are therefore controlled by basin subsidence rather than sediment supply. Published slip rates for Holocene extension are greater than our determined late Quaternary slip rates, assuming reasonable rates of deposition. The apparent increased Holocene fault-slip rates may be in part an artifact of long recurrence intervals between major earthquakes, with recent seismicity accommodating long-term strain. The quantity of observed faults below the lake is at least an order of magnitude greater than those mapped outside the lake, suggesting that many hidden faults throughout the region may be unaccounted for when estimating Basin and Range extension rates.
Abstract This volume contains guides for 33 geological field trips offered in conjunction with the October 2009 GSA Annual Meeting in Portland, Oregon. Showcasing the region’s geological diversity, the peer-reviewed papers included here span topics ranging from accreted terrains and mantle plumes to volcanoes, floods, and vineyard terroir. Locations visited throughout Oregon, Washington, and Idaho encompass Astoria to Zillah. More than just a series of maps, the accompanying descriptions, observations, and conclusions offer new insights to the geologic processes and history of the Pacific Northwest insights that will inspire readers to put their boots on the evidence (or perhaps sip it from a glass of Pinot!) as they develop their own understanding of this remarkable and dynamic corner of the world.
Folds, floods, and fine wine: Geologic influences on the terroir of the Columbia Basin
ABSTRACT The geomorphology, soils, and climate of Columbia Basin vineyards are the result of a complex and dynamic geologic history that includes the Earth's youngest flood basalts, an active fold belt, and repeated cataclysmic flooding. Miocene basalt of the Columbia River Basalt Group forms the bedrock for most vineyards. The basalt has been folded by north-south compression, creating the Yakima fold belt, a series of relatively tight anticlines separated by broad synclines. Topography related to these structures has strongly influenced the boundaries of many of the Columbia Basin's American Viticultural Areas (AVAs). Water gaps in the anticlinal ridges of the Yakima fold belt restrict cold air drainage from the broad synclinal basins where many vineyards are located, enhancing the development of temperature inversions and locally increasing diurnal temperature variations. Vineyards planted on the southern limbs of Yakima fold belt anticlines benefit from enhanced solar radiation and cold air drainage. Most Columbia Basin vineyards are planted in soils formed in eolian sediment that is primarily derived from the deposits of Pleistocene glacial outburst floods. The mineralogy of the eolian sediment differs substantially from the underlying basalt. Vineyard soil chemistry is thus more complex in areas where eolian sediment is comparatively thin and basalt regolith lies within the rooting zone. The components of physical terroir that broadly characterize the Columbia Basin, such as those described above, vary substantially both between and within its AVAs. The vineyards visited on this field trip are representative of both their AVAs and the variability of terroir within the Columbia Basin.
Abstract A prevailing hypothesis for the central Cascade Range of Washington State is that it underwent regional extension or transtension during the Eocene. This hypothesis is based on the idea that kilometers-thick, clastic, Eocene formations were deposited syntectonically in local basins. Our mapping and structural analysis indicate that these formations are preserved in fault-bounded, regional synclines, not in separate depositional basins. Thus, the type area for the hypothesis, the so-called Chiwaukum graben, is here renamed the Chiwaukum Structural Low. The Eocene arkosic Chum-stick Formation, which was thought to have been syntectonically deposited in the graben, is the proximal equivalent of the Roslyn Formation 25 km southwest of the graben. Because the name “Roslyn Formation” has precedence, the name “Chumstick Formation” should be abandoned. Additionally, several areas previously mapped as Chumstick Formation in the Chiwaukum Structural Low probably are parts of the older Swauk Formation and younger Wenatchee Formation. The southwestern boundary of the Chiwaukum Structural Low includes the Leav-enworth fault zone, which consists of postdepositional, northwest-striking reverse faults with adjacent northwest-striking folds. The reverse faults place the regionally extensive early-Eocene, arkosic Swauk Formation over the mid-Eocene, arkosic Chumstick Formation. A diamictite, which previously was placed in the Chumstick Formation and inferred to have been syntectonically derived from the Leavenworth fault zone, is part of the older Swauk Formation. We mapped a 0.6–1-km-thick conglomerate-bearing sandstone as a robust marker unit in the Chumstick Formation; instead of being spatially related to the bounding faults, this unit has a >30 km strike length around the limbs of folds in the structural low. The northwest-striking reverse faults and fold hinges of the structural low are cut by north-striking strike-slip faults, which likely are late Eocene to Oligocene; these north-south faults partially bound the structural low. The Eocene folds and faults were reactivated by deformation of the Miocene Columbia River Basalt Group; this younger folding largely defines the regional map pattern, including the structural low. A model to account for the above characteristics is that all of the Eocene formations, not just the Roslyn Formation, are kilometers thick and are remnants of regional unconformity-bounded sequences that were deposited on the Eocene margin of this part of North America. Their present distribution is governed by younger faults, folds, and erosion. Thus, the Eocene to Recent history of the central Cascade region is characterized not by crustal extension, but by episodes of folding (with related reverse faults) and strike-slip faulting.
A field guide to Newberry Volcano, Oregon
Abstract Newberry Volcano is located in central Oregon at the intersection of the Cascade Range and the High Lava Plains. Its lavas range in age from ca. 0.5 Ma to late Holocene. Erupted products range in composition from basalt through rhyolite and cover ~3000 km 2 . The most recent caldera-forming eruption occurred ~80,000 years ago. This trip will highlight a revised understanding of the volcano's history based on new detailed geologic work. Stops will also focus on evidence for ice and flooding on the volcano, as well as new studies of Holocene mafic eruptions. Newberry is one of the most accessible U.S. volcanoes, and this trip will visit a range of lava types and compositions including tholeiitic and calc-alkaline basalt flows, cinder cones, and rhyolitic domes and tuffs. Stops will include early distal basalts as well as the youngest intracaldera obsidian flow.
Ice and water on Newberry Volcano, central Oregon
ABSTRACT Newberry Volcano in central Oregon is dry over much of its vast area, except for the lakes in the caldera and the single creek that drains them. Despite the lack of obvious glacial striations and well-formed glacial moraines, evidence indicates that Newberry was glaciated. Meter-sized foreign blocks, commonly with smoothed shapes, are found on cinder cones as far as 7 km from the caldera rim. These cones also show evidence of shaping by flowing ice. In addition, multiple dry channels likely cut by glacial meltwater are common features of the eastern and western flanks of the volcano. On the older eastern flank of the volcano, a complex depositional and erosional history is recorded by lava flows, some of which flowed down channels, and interbedded sediments of probable glacial origin. Postglacial lava flows have subsequently filled some of the channels cut into the sediments. The evidence suggests that Newberry Volcano has been subjected to multiple glaciations.
Abstract The northwest rift zone (NWRZ) eruption took place at Newberry Volcano ~7000 years ago after the volcano was mantled by tephra from the catastrophic eruption that destroyed Mount Mazama and produced the Crater Lake caldera. The NWRZ eruption produced multiple lava flows from a variety of vents including cinder cones, spatter vents, and fissures, possibly in more than one episode. Eruptive behaviors ranged from energetic Strombolian, which produced significant tephra plumes, to low-energy Hawaiian-style. This paper summarizes and in part reinterprets what is known about the eruption and presents information from new and ongoing studies. Total distance spanned by the eruption is 32 km north-south. The northernmost flow of the NWRZ blocked the Deschutes River upstream from the city of Bend, Oregon, and changed the course of the river. Renewed mafic activity in the region, particularly eruptions such as the NWRZ with tephra plumes and multiple lava flows from many vents, would have significant impacts for the residents of Bend and other central Oregon communities.
Abstract The 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens caused instantaneous landscape disturbance on a grand scale. On 18 May 1980, an ensemble of volcanic processes, including a debris avalanche, a directed pyroclastic density current, voluminous lahars, and widespread tephra fall, abruptly altered landscape hydrology and geomorphology, and created distinctive disturbance zones having varying impacts on regional biota. Response to the geological and ecological disturbances has been varied and complex. In general, eruption-induced alterations in landscape hydrology and geomorphology led to enhanced stormflow discharge and sediment transport. Although the hydrolog-ical response to landscape perturbation has diminished, enhanced sediment transport persists in some basins. In the nearly 30 years since the eruption, 350 million (metric) tons of suspended sediment has been delivered from the Toutle River watershed to the Cowlitz River (roughly 40 times the average annual preeruption suspended-sediment discharge of the Columbia River). Such prodigious sediment loading has wreaked considerable socioeconomic havoc, causing significant channel aggradation and loss of flood conveyance capacity. significant and ongoing engineering efforts have been required to mitigate these problems. The overall biological evolution of the eruption-impacted landscape can be viewed in terms of a framework of survivor legacies. Despite appearances to the contrary, a surprising number of species survived the eruption, even in the most heavily devastated areas. With time, survivor “hotspots” have coalesced into larger patches, and have served as stepping stones for immigrant colonization. The importance of biological legacies will diminish with time, but the intertwined trajectories of geophysical and biological successions will influence the geological and biological responses to the 1980 eruption for decades to come.
Abstract The John Day Basin of central Oregon contains a remarkably detailed and well-dated Early Eocene–Late Miocene sedimentary sequence, known for its superb fossils. This field trip examines plant fossil assemblages from throughout the sequence in the context of their geological and taphonomic setting and regional and global significance. The Early to Late Eocene (>54–39.7 Ma) Clarno Formation contains fossil plants and animals that occupied an active volcanic landscape near sea level, interspersed with meandering rivers and lakes. Clarno assemblages, including the ca. 44 Ma Nut Beds flora, record near-tropical “Boreotropical” rainforest, which was replaced during late Clarno time by more open and seasonal subtropical forest. The overlying John Day Formation (39.7–18.2 Ma) was deposited in a backarc landscape of low hills dotted with lakes and showered by ashfalls from the Western Cascades. Fossils and paleosols record the advent of the “Icehouse” Earth during the earliest Oligocene, with decreasing winter temperature and more seasonal rainfall that supported open deciduous and coniferous forest, much like that of the southern Chinese highlands today. Sixteen and a half million years ago the Picture Gorge flood basalt covered the region. Animals and plants fossilized in the overlying (ca. 16 to >12 Ma) Mascall Formation occupied a relatively flat landscape during a warm and moist period known as the Middle Miocene Climatic Optimum. In total this sequence preserves a detailed series of time slices illustrating regional biotic and landscape evolution during the Cenozoic that is highly relevant for deciphering regional and global biotic, climatic, and geological trends.
ABSTRACT This field guide describes stops in the Oregon Klamath Mountains that visit near-complete ophiolite sections, pre- and post-accretion arc plutons, greenschist- to amphibolite-grade metamorphosed wallrocks, arc volcanic rocks, and interbedded chert, argillite, and olistostromal deposits. Structural features at these stops include local- and regional-scale folds and faults, as well as penetrative metamorphic fabrics such as slaty cleavage, gneissic layering, and mineral lineations. The geologic history here reveals a period of Late Triassic and Jurassic ophiolite and oceanic-arc formation followed by Middle Jurassic terrane accretion, tectonic mélange formation, and continued oceanic arc magmatism. Rifting from ca. 165 to 160 Ma produced the Rogue-Chetco arc, Josephine ophiolite, and remnant arc comprised of older Klamath Mountains terranes. Deformation and magmatism during the Late Jurassic Neva-dan orogeny accreted this active arc–inter-arc basin–remnant arc triad to western North America, producing the lithotectonic belts observed today. The Oregon Klam-ath Mountains therefore provide an exceptional opportunity to examine the deep to shallow levels of multi-phase oceanic lithosphere and deformational features related to the accretion of these terranes to the continental margin.
Mesozoic sedimentation, magmatism, and tectonics in the Blue Mountains Province, northeastern Oregon
Abstract This field trip guide describes a two-day excursion through Mesozoic accreted terranes of the Blue Mountains Province in northeastern Oregon. Day 1 is focused on sedimentary rocks of the Izee terrane. These deposits are divided into two unconformity-bounded megasequences, MS-1 and MS-2, that record two stages of syntectonic basin formation. MS-1 (Late Triassic to Early Jurassic) accumulated in fault-bounded marine sub-basins on the flank of an inferred growing Baker terrane thrust belt. MS-1 sandstones, derived from the Baker terrane, contain abundant Paleozoic, Late Paleoproterozoic, and Late Archean detrital-zircon grains. These observations suggest affinity of the Baker terrane and MS-1 in the Izee area to portions of the Klamath and Sierra Nevada terranes that contain similar detrital-zircon age distributions. MS-2 (Early to early-Late Jurassic) accumulated in a large marine basin that received input from low-grade metavolcanic rocks to the east (modern coordinates). Detrital zircons are dominated by Mesozoic, Neoproterozoic, and Mesoproterozoic grains. Two possible interpretations for MS-2 are: (1) the Jurassic Izee basin was fed directly by the large Mesozoic trans-cratonal sediment-dispersal system, or (2) trans-cratonal sediment was deposited in a Triassic backarc basin in Nevada and was later recycled into the Jurassic Izee basin during Cordilleran orogenesis. Day 2 of the field trip is focused on Jurassic–Cretaceous magmatism in the Baker terrane. Late Middle Jurassic to Early Cretaceous igneous rocks in the Blue Mountains Province record three distinct pulses of plutonism that are characterized by distinctive spatial and geochemical signatures. These episodes consist of: (1) late Middle to Late Jurassic small gabbro to quartz diorite plutons (ca. 162–154 Ma; low Sr/Y); (2) Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous plutons and batholiths (ca. 148 and 137 Ma; includes spatially distinct belts of low and high Sr/Y at 147–145 Ma); and (3) Early Cretaceous small plutons of tonalitic and trondhjemitic composition (ca. 124–111 Ma). Temporal transitions in geochemical characteristics between these suites raise fundamental questions regarding the origins of plutonism in the Baker terrane. In particular, the transition from low Sr/Y (group 1) to high Sr/Y (group 2) magmatism in the Greenhorn subterrane occurred ~ 7 Ma after regional contraction, and may record partial melting of thickened crust as a direct result of Late Jurassic orogenesis.
ABSTRACT The field trip guide describes nine stops that examine the mechanisms and timing of some of the abundant and often gigantic landslides that occur along the Winter Ridge–Slide Mountain escarpment in south-central Oregon. Subsidence of Summer Lake basin, situated in the northwestern Basin and Range province, has exposed a kilometer-thick Neogene sequence of dense volcanic flow rocks overlying very weak tuffaceous sedimentary rocks in the bounding escarpment. Subsidence is accommodated on the 58-km-long Winter Rim fault system, a normal fault which is capable of producing M w ≈ 7 earthquakes with near-field, maximum horizontal acceleration approaching 1 g on the bedrock footwall. Gigantic rock slides cubic kilometers in volume scallop the southwestern portion of the escarpment, and their deposits run out as rock avalanches several kilometers onto the basin floor. Limit-equilibrium slope stability analyses support observations that these gigantic bedrock landslides initiate within the weak tuffaceous sedimentary rocks along shallow, east-dipping, planar failure surfaces one to two kilometers in length; are insensitive to groundwater fluctuations; and, are stable under static conditions. Strong ground motions appear requisite to trigger landsliding and are necessary to replicate the long, shallow failure surfaces. Landslide, colluvial, and lacustrine deposits on the hanging wall have undergone widespread post-emplacement deformation, which may involve large-scale seismogenic lateral spreading and flow sliding controlled by the saturated, fine-grained basin fill.
Abstract Late Holocene dome-building eruptions at Mount Hood during the Timberline and Old Maid eruptive periods resulted in numerous dome-collapse pyroclastic flows and lahars that moved large volumes of volcaniclastic sediment into temporary storage in headwater canyons of the Sandy River. During each eruptive period, accelerated sediment loading to the river through erosion and remobilization of volcanic fragmental debris resulted in very high sediment-transport rates in the Sandy River during rain- and snowmelt-induced floods. Large sediment loads in excess of the river's transport capacity led to channel aggradation, channel widening, and change to a braided channel form in the lowermost reach of the river, between 61 and 87 km downstream from the volcano. The post-eruption sediment load moved as a broad bed-material wave, which in the case of the Old Maid eruption took ~2 decades to crest 83 km downstream. Maximum post-eruption aggradation levels of at least 28 and 23 m were achieved in response to Timberline and Old Maid eruptions. In each case, downstream aggradation cycles were initiated by lahars, but the bulk of the aggradation was achieved by fluvial sediment transport and deposition. When the high rates of sediment supply began to diminish, the river degraded, incising the channel fills and forming progressively lower sets of degradational terraces. A variety of debris-flow, hyperconcentrated-flow, and fluvial (upper and lower flow regime) deposits record the downstream passage of the sediment waves that were initiated by these eruptions. The deposits also presage a hazard that may be faced by communities along the Sandy River when volcanic activity at Mount Hood resumes.
Abstract Landslides and floods of lava and water tremendously affected the Columbia River during its long history of transecting the Cascade Volcanic Arc. This field trip touches on aspects of the resulting geology of the scenic Columbia River Gorge, including the river-blocking Bonneville landslide of ~550 years ago and the great late-Pleistocene Missoula floods. Not only did these events create great landscapes, but they inspired great geologists. Mid-nineteenth century observations of the Columbia River and Pacific Northwest by James Dwight Dana and John Strong Newberry helped germinate the “school of fluvial” erosion later expanded upon by the southwestern United States topographic and geologic surveys. Later work on features related to the Missoula floods framed the career of J Harlen Bretz in one of the great geologic controversies of the twentieth century.
Abstract More than 80 small volcanoes are scattered throughout the Portland-Vancouver metropolitan area of northwestern Oregon and southwestern Washington. These volcanoes constitute the Boring Volcanic Field, which is centered in the Neogene Portland Basin and merges to the east with coeval volcanic centers of the High Cascade volcanic arc. Although the character of volcanic activity is typical of many monogenetic volcanic fields, its tectonic setting is not, being located in the forearc of the Cascadia subduction system well trenchward of the volcanic-arc axis. The history and petrology of this anomalous volcanic field have been elucidated by a comprehensive program of geologic mapping, geochemistry, 40 Ar/ 39 Ar geochronology, and paleomag-netic studies. Volcanism began at 2.6 Ma with eruption of low-K tholeiite and related lavas in the southern part of the Portland Basin. At 1.6 Ma, following a hiatus of ~0.8 m.y., similar lavas erupted a few kilometers to the north, after which volcanism became widely dispersed, compositionally variable, and more or less continuous, with an average recurrence interval of 15,000 yr. The youngest centers, 50-130 ka, are found in the northern part of the field. Boring centers are generally monogenetic and mafic but a few larger edifices, ranging from basalt to low-SiO 2 andesite, were also constructed. Low-K to high-K calc-alkaline compositions similar to those of the nearby volcanic arc dominate the field, but many centers erupted magmas that exhibit little influence of fluids derived from the subducting slab. The timing and compositional characteristics of Boring volcanism suggest a genetic relationship with late Neogene intra-arc rifting.
ABSTRACT The field trip examines coupled hydrologic and landscape response after the cataclysmic eruption of Mount Mazama to form Crater Lake in the Cascade volcanic arc at ~7627 ± 150 cal. yr B.P. The Williamson River basin, east of Crater Lake and in the rain shadow of the Cascade Range, was buried beneath thick pumice and pyroclastic-flow deposits. The distinctive physical properties of pumice and volcanic ash affect the movement and retention of water and the ongoing evolution of the landscape. Three themes will be explored: (1) post-eruption transition from perched streams to losing streams along the eastern flank of the Cascade Range; (2) filling and catastrophic draining of a lake trapped behind a dam of pyroclastic flow deposits in the Williamson River canyon; and (3) post-eruption faulting and the hydrology of Klamath Marsh.
ABSTRACT Steens Mountain, a fault-block in the northern Basin and Range Province, rises 1.7 km above flanking basins and drives hydrologic systems that include hot springs, fresh-water streams, and cold artesian wells in the Alvord Valley. It also feeds freshwater streams, desert wetlands, and shallow fresh-water and alkali lakes in the Harney Basin. Steens Mountain melt water from the winter snow pack partitions to surface-water and groundwater systems. How the composition of these fluids evolve along the various flow paths as a result of differences in the geology, interaction with geother-mal aquifers, surface storage time, degree of evaporation, and biology will be examined. Deep-seated flow paths feed Alvord Valley hot springs, which discharge to the east, in the rain shadow of Steens Mountain. The largest of these hot spring systems— Borax Lake—along with features at Mickey Hot Springs, offer ample opportunity to investigate how biosignatures form and become preserved in hydrothermally precipitated sinter deposits. Surface water moving off the westward-dipping slope of Steens Mountain passes through wetland environments to Malheur Lake in Harney Basin. This key point along the Pacific flyway provides wonderful wildlife viewing and the chance to ponder the impacts of biology on lake chemistry. Finally, we will visit the saline-alkaline Harney Lake, the terminal sump for the water moving through Malheur Lake and all of the nearly 40,000 km 2 Harney Basin. At this locale, the focus will be on the influence of evaporative processes on water composition.