MIDDLE CRETACEOUS ASH-FLOW TUFF AND CALDERA-COLLAPSE DEPOSIT IN THE MINARETS-CALDERA, EAST-CENTRAL SIERRA-NEVADA, CALIFORNIA

Citation
Rs. Fiske et Ot. Tobisch, MIDDLE CRETACEOUS ASH-FLOW TUFF AND CALDERA-COLLAPSE DEPOSIT IN THE MINARETS-CALDERA, EAST-CENTRAL SIERRA-NEVADA, CALIFORNIA, Geological Society of America bulletin, 106(5), 1994, pp. 582-593
Citations number
21
Categorie Soggetti
Geology
ISSN journal
00167606
Volume
106
Issue
5
Year of publication
1994
Pages
582 - 593
Database
ISI
SICI code
0016-7606(1994)106:5<582:MCATAC>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
A 2.3-km section of ash-flow tuff and associated caldera-collapse depo sit, representing the extrusive facies of part of the Sierra Nevada ba tholith, is totally exposed from its floor to its top in the Minarets Caldera, east-central Sierra Nevada. Rapid burial and subsequent hornb lende hornfels facies metamorphism resulted in remarkable preservation of primary textures and structures, despite the development of cleava ge domains in parts of the caldera fill; late Tertiary uplift and Quat ernary erosion have produced a rugged terrain where every meter of sec tion is available for study. Large-scale caldera-filling eruption of a sh-flow tuff was interrupted by emplacement of a wedge-shaped mass of caldera-collapse deposit as much as 2 km thick, whose volume exceeded 70 km3. Individual clasts in the caldera-collapse deposit range to as much as 1.8 km across and include a wide variety of andesitic to rhyol itic lavas and related volcaniclastic rocks, remnants of a precaldera volcanic field that was probably much more extensive than the caldera itself. The caldera-fill sequence rests with angular unconformity on a rugged surface eroded into older volcanic rocks; the sequence is capp ed by bedded volcaniclastic rocks, including delicately laminated tuff s of probable caldera lake origin. The total aerial extent of the Mina rets Caldera is not known, but the area studied, plus scattered pendan ts of ash-flow tuff and associated volcaniclastic rocks to the west, d efines a 30- x 22-km elliptical area that may approximate its original shape. The caldera fill is invaded by a body of quartz monzonite porp hyry, locally miarolitic, that was probably emplaced during an episode of caldera resurgence.