Structural Analysis of Eocene Dike Swarms in and Near the Duncan Hill Pluton, North Cascades, Washington

<p> Voluminous Eocene dikes in the North Cascades are thought to provide insights into the regional strain field during postulated ridge&ndash;trench interaction in the Pacific Northwest. One understudied area with a large number of dikes is spatially associated with the elongate (NW-SE),...

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Main Author: Bryant, Kathleen I.
Language:EN
Published: San Jose State University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10599492
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-105994922017-08-18T04:01:10Z Structural Analysis of Eocene Dike Swarms in and Near the Duncan Hill Pluton, North Cascades, Washington Bryant, Kathleen I. Geology <p> Voluminous Eocene dikes in the North Cascades are thought to provide insights into the regional strain field during postulated ridge&ndash;trench interaction in the Pacific Northwest. One understudied area with a large number of dikes is spatially associated with the elongate (NW-SE), ~46 Ma granodioritic Duncan Hill pluton. The ~80 km2 study area contains the shallow part of this pluton and the host schist of the Twentyfive Mile Creek unit and tonalite and migmatite of the Cretaceous Chelan Complex. Field observations and petrographic analyses indicate that the dikes in the study area can be sub-divided compositionally and texturally into three types: intermediate-mafic, granite porphyry, and rhyolite. Extension magnitudes from the dikes (n=438) are ~4% to 7%. The dikes have predominantly steep dips, but vary widely in strike and define a broadly bimodal pattern of NW (301&deg;) and NE (026&deg;) strikes. Orientations indicate that the Duncan Hill pluton did not modify the strain field, whereas the strong foliation and anisotropy in the Twentyfive Mile Creek unit may be responsible for some of the NW strikes. The NE-striking dikes likely record the regional NW-SE extension that was active when they intruded. From the data collected in this study, it cannot be ruled out that the NW-striking dikes intruded at different times and under a different regional strain field. This work has shown that dike orientations in the study area are much more complex than those documented elsewhere in the North Cascades.</p><p> San Jose State University 2017-08-17 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10599492 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Geology
spellingShingle Geology
Bryant, Kathleen I.
Structural Analysis of Eocene Dike Swarms in and Near the Duncan Hill Pluton, North Cascades, Washington
description <p> Voluminous Eocene dikes in the North Cascades are thought to provide insights into the regional strain field during postulated ridge&ndash;trench interaction in the Pacific Northwest. One understudied area with a large number of dikes is spatially associated with the elongate (NW-SE), ~46 Ma granodioritic Duncan Hill pluton. The ~80 km2 study area contains the shallow part of this pluton and the host schist of the Twentyfive Mile Creek unit and tonalite and migmatite of the Cretaceous Chelan Complex. Field observations and petrographic analyses indicate that the dikes in the study area can be sub-divided compositionally and texturally into three types: intermediate-mafic, granite porphyry, and rhyolite. Extension magnitudes from the dikes (n=438) are ~4% to 7%. The dikes have predominantly steep dips, but vary widely in strike and define a broadly bimodal pattern of NW (301&deg;) and NE (026&deg;) strikes. Orientations indicate that the Duncan Hill pluton did not modify the strain field, whereas the strong foliation and anisotropy in the Twentyfive Mile Creek unit may be responsible for some of the NW strikes. The NE-striking dikes likely record the regional NW-SE extension that was active when they intruded. From the data collected in this study, it cannot be ruled out that the NW-striking dikes intruded at different times and under a different regional strain field. This work has shown that dike orientations in the study area are much more complex than those documented elsewhere in the North Cascades.</p><p>
author Bryant, Kathleen I.
author_facet Bryant, Kathleen I.
author_sort Bryant, Kathleen I.
title Structural Analysis of Eocene Dike Swarms in and Near the Duncan Hill Pluton, North Cascades, Washington
title_short Structural Analysis of Eocene Dike Swarms in and Near the Duncan Hill Pluton, North Cascades, Washington
title_full Structural Analysis of Eocene Dike Swarms in and Near the Duncan Hill Pluton, North Cascades, Washington
title_fullStr Structural Analysis of Eocene Dike Swarms in and Near the Duncan Hill Pluton, North Cascades, Washington
title_full_unstemmed Structural Analysis of Eocene Dike Swarms in and Near the Duncan Hill Pluton, North Cascades, Washington
title_sort structural analysis of eocene dike swarms in and near the duncan hill pluton, north cascades, washington
publisher San Jose State University
publishDate 2017
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10599492
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