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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Houston Geological Society Bulletin
Abstract
Abstract: The Tertiary Geology and Ignimbrite Petrology of the Grant Range, East Central Nevada
By
Rice University, Ph.D. thesis, 116 p., appendix of 49 p., March, 1965
Tertiary rocks in the Grant Range in the eastern Great Basin, Nevada
consist of 5,000 to 15,000 feet of rhyolitic ignimbrite sheets, non- marine sediments,
and siliceous flows. From oldest to youngest the major units are the
1) Sheep Pass Formation, lacustrine limestone, Middle to Upper Eocene;
2) Railroad Valley Rhyolite, 36 m. y .; 3) Calloway Well Formation, ignimbrites;
4) Stone Cabin Formation, ignimbrites; 5) Windous Butte Formation, ignimbrites,
33 m.y.; 6) Currant Tuff, tuffaceous sediment; 7) Needles Range Formation,
ignimbrites; 9) Horse Camp Formation, tuffaceous fluvial and lacustrine
sediments,
Mio-Pliocene; 10) local andesite and dacite flows, Upper Pliocene-Pleistocene; 11) Quaternary terraces, lake sediments, and alluvial deposits.
Mesozoic thrusting associated with the Sevier Orogeny in the Grant Range
was confined to decollement-like shear zones characterized by omission instead
of repetition of strata. Tertiary units were deposited nearly parallel to the
underlying Upper Paleozoic strata. Volcanic activity began about 5 m.y. after
initial Tertiary normal faulting. The first two ignimbrite formations inundated,
topographic irregularities; the upper units covered large regions with thin continuous
sheets. Three small ignimbrite vents are present, but no caldera or
major dike systems were located. Large scale, north-south trending, normal
faulting (Miocene to Recent) has created sedimentary basins, triggered large
scale gravity sliding, and formed the range boundaries. East-west strike-slip
faulting has offset the ranges. Progressive tilting from the Pliocene to Recent
has caused strata above an incompetent Carboniferous shale to slide variable
distances to the east. Deuteric alteration and, to a lesser degree, weathering controlled the
vertical chemical variation in ignimbrite cooling units. A potassium-sodium
exchange was the most distinctive deuteric alteration phenomenon. The magnesium
and iron distributions were also greatly controlled by deuteric alteration.
Weathering affected the chemistry primarily by leaching sodium. Hydrothermal
alteration added potassium and removed sodium in plagioclases and volcanic glass. Compositions of bulk ignimbrite samples indicate that anatectic formation
of ignimbritic magmas occurred at under saturated vapor pressures in excess of
500 to 2000 bars, and stratigraphic relationships imply that anatexis occurred
at depths on the order of 11 to 15 kilometers. Compositions of ignimbrite
glasses and coexisting crystals show that eutectic crystallization of this ignimbrite
magma occurred under vapor pressures on the order of 3000 to 5000 bars, which
correspond to an overburden pressure of 11 to 17.5 kilometers.
The variety of tectonic environments of ignimbrite regions throughout the
world show only one common feature, tensional or extensional faulting. The
coincidence of extensional stresses and a granitic magma under high water
pressure is probably necessary for the formation of ignimbrites. End_of_Record - Last_Page 23--------