Reconnaissance Cenozoic volcanic geology of the Little Goose Creek area, northeastern Elko County, NV with an emphasis on the Jarbidge Rhyolite

Master of Science === Department of Geology === Matthew Brueseke === The Little Goose Creek area is located in Elko County, Nevada just south of the central Snake River Plain and in the northeastern Great Basin. During the Miocene, northeastern Nevada was characterized by volcanism as well as preval...

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Main Author: Ingalls, Andrew
Language:en_US
Published: Kansas State University 2014
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/18195
id ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-18195
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spelling ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-181952016-03-01T03:52:21Z Reconnaissance Cenozoic volcanic geology of the Little Goose Creek area, northeastern Elko County, NV with an emphasis on the Jarbidge Rhyolite Ingalls, Andrew Elko County Jarbidge Rhyolite Cenozoic Nevada Volcanic Geology Geology (0372) Master of Science Department of Geology Matthew Brueseke The Little Goose Creek area is located in Elko County, Nevada just south of the central Snake River Plain and in the northeastern Great Basin. During the Miocene, northeastern Nevada was characterized by volcanism as well as prevalent extension and basin development, including widespread occurrences of porphyritic quartz-phyric silicic lavas and domes (e.g., the Jarbidge Rhyolite), ash-flow tuffs, and basaltic volcanism. Recent workers (e.g., Colgan and Henry, 2010) have provided new constraints on the timing of extension in the northern Great Basin (U.S.A.) and indicate that much of it occurred in the mid-Miocene. Other recent work has provided new temporal and petrologic constraints on 16.1 to 15.0 Ma Jarbidge Rhyolite volcanism in the northern Great Basin west of our study area, and suggest that it is intimately linked (spatially and temporally) with the aforementioned extension. This study aims to: [1] understand the spatiotemporal link between the volcanism in the northeastern Nevada study area and potentially correlative volcanism regionally (e.g., Jarbidge Rhyolite and explosive deposits associated with the <13 Ma Bruneau-Jarbidge or Twin Falls eruptive centers); [2] determine if the sampled Jarbidge Rhyolite lavas are chemically similar to those in and around Jarbidge, Nevada. In the Goose Creek area, we report a new laser [superscript]40Ar/[superscript]39Ar age for sanidine of 13.6 ± 0.03 Ma for a crystal-poor rhyolite lava (Rock Springs Rhyolite) and a Jarbidge Rhyolite lava (13.827±0.021 Ma) as well as an age on Jarbidge Rhyolite in Wells, NV (15.249±0.040 Ma) and West Wendover, NV (13.686±0.034 Ma). These lava samples, as well as sampled ash-flow tuffs from the Goose Creek region, plot within the A-type field on discrimination diagrams. The ash-flow tuffs are younger than the Rock Springs Rhyolite based on stratigraphic relationships and are sourced from both the Twin Falls eruptive center as well as the Bruneau Jarbidge eruptive center of the central Snake River Plain based on geochemical analysis. Also, a sequence of basaltic lavas crop out in the Goose Creek drainage; these basalts have ~43 wt.% silica and are chemically similar to <8 Ma olivine tholeiite basalts that crop out to the north, along the southwestern side of the Cassia Mountains, Idaho. These results, field relationships, and prior geological mapping suggest that the lavas and ash-flow tuffs erupted into active extensional basins. 2014-08-08T21:18:46Z 2014-08-08T21:18:46Z 2014-08-08 2014 August Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2097/18195 en_US Kansas State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Elko County
Jarbidge Rhyolite
Cenozoic
Nevada
Volcanic Geology
Geology (0372)
spellingShingle Elko County
Jarbidge Rhyolite
Cenozoic
Nevada
Volcanic Geology
Geology (0372)
Ingalls, Andrew
Reconnaissance Cenozoic volcanic geology of the Little Goose Creek area, northeastern Elko County, NV with an emphasis on the Jarbidge Rhyolite
description Master of Science === Department of Geology === Matthew Brueseke === The Little Goose Creek area is located in Elko County, Nevada just south of the central Snake River Plain and in the northeastern Great Basin. During the Miocene, northeastern Nevada was characterized by volcanism as well as prevalent extension and basin development, including widespread occurrences of porphyritic quartz-phyric silicic lavas and domes (e.g., the Jarbidge Rhyolite), ash-flow tuffs, and basaltic volcanism. Recent workers (e.g., Colgan and Henry, 2010) have provided new constraints on the timing of extension in the northern Great Basin (U.S.A.) and indicate that much of it occurred in the mid-Miocene. Other recent work has provided new temporal and petrologic constraints on 16.1 to 15.0 Ma Jarbidge Rhyolite volcanism in the northern Great Basin west of our study area, and suggest that it is intimately linked (spatially and temporally) with the aforementioned extension. This study aims to: [1] understand the spatiotemporal link between the volcanism in the northeastern Nevada study area and potentially correlative volcanism regionally (e.g., Jarbidge Rhyolite and explosive deposits associated with the <13 Ma Bruneau-Jarbidge or Twin Falls eruptive centers); [2] determine if the sampled Jarbidge Rhyolite lavas are chemically similar to those in and around Jarbidge, Nevada. In the Goose Creek area, we report a new laser [superscript]40Ar/[superscript]39Ar age for sanidine of 13.6 ± 0.03 Ma for a crystal-poor rhyolite lava (Rock Springs Rhyolite) and a Jarbidge Rhyolite lava (13.827±0.021 Ma) as well as an age on Jarbidge Rhyolite in Wells, NV (15.249±0.040 Ma) and West Wendover, NV (13.686±0.034 Ma). These lava samples, as well as sampled ash-flow tuffs from the Goose Creek region, plot within the A-type field on discrimination diagrams. The ash-flow tuffs are younger than the Rock Springs Rhyolite based on stratigraphic relationships and are sourced from both the Twin Falls eruptive center as well as the Bruneau Jarbidge eruptive center of the central Snake River Plain based on geochemical analysis. Also, a sequence of basaltic lavas crop out in the Goose Creek drainage; these basalts have ~43 wt.% silica and are chemically similar to <8 Ma olivine tholeiite basalts that crop out to the north, along the southwestern side of the Cassia Mountains, Idaho. These results, field relationships, and prior geological mapping suggest that the lavas and ash-flow tuffs erupted into active extensional basins.
author Ingalls, Andrew
author_facet Ingalls, Andrew
author_sort Ingalls, Andrew
title Reconnaissance Cenozoic volcanic geology of the Little Goose Creek area, northeastern Elko County, NV with an emphasis on the Jarbidge Rhyolite
title_short Reconnaissance Cenozoic volcanic geology of the Little Goose Creek area, northeastern Elko County, NV with an emphasis on the Jarbidge Rhyolite
title_full Reconnaissance Cenozoic volcanic geology of the Little Goose Creek area, northeastern Elko County, NV with an emphasis on the Jarbidge Rhyolite
title_fullStr Reconnaissance Cenozoic volcanic geology of the Little Goose Creek area, northeastern Elko County, NV with an emphasis on the Jarbidge Rhyolite
title_full_unstemmed Reconnaissance Cenozoic volcanic geology of the Little Goose Creek area, northeastern Elko County, NV with an emphasis on the Jarbidge Rhyolite
title_sort reconnaissance cenozoic volcanic geology of the little goose creek area, northeastern elko county, nv with an emphasis on the jarbidge rhyolite
publisher Kansas State University
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/18195
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