Revised age of the Rockland tephra, northern California: Implications for climate and stratigraphic reconstructions in the western United States

Citation
Ma. Lanphere et al., Revised age of the Rockland tephra, northern California: Implications for climate and stratigraphic reconstructions in the western United States, GEOLOGY, 27(2), 1999, pp. 135-138
Citations number
24
Categorie Soggetti
Earth Sciences
Journal title
GEOLOGY
ISSN journal
00917613 → ACNP
Volume
27
Issue
2
Year of publication
1999
Pages
135 - 138
Database
ISI
SICI code
0091-7613(199902)27:2<135:RAOTRT>2.0.ZU;2-8
Abstract
The Rockland tephra is an important stratigraphic marker for climate and st ratigraphic reconstructions over a broad area of the western United States. New Ar-40/Ar-39 ages are as much as 200 k.y. older than previous cogenetic zircon fission-track ages, which range from 400 to 560 ka. Incremental-hea ting Ar-40/Ar-39 analyses on two splits of plagioclase from a proximal ash flow of the Rockland tephra in the Lassen Peak area, California, yield an a verage age-spectrum-plateau age of 614 +/- 8 ka and an isochron age of 611 +/- 11 ka. Our new age for the Rockland tephra is compatible with an Ar-40/ Ar-39 analysis of plagioclase from the basaltic andesite of Hootman Ranch t hat directly overlies the Rockland tephra, A plateau age of 565 +/- 29 ka, an isochron age of 572 +/- 39 ka, and transitional directions of remanent m agnetization suggest an age for the basaltic andesite of Hootman Ranch as c a, 570 ka, Correlation of the Rockland tephra with its suspected distal ash in sedimentary sections at widely scattered localities has made the ash an extremely valuable stratigraphic tool. Our new age for the Rockland tephra requires significant revision of many recent climate-based analyses in the western United States. In particular, the best ages for the Rockland tephr a (614 ka) and the Lava Creek B ash (660 ka) and their association with oxy gen isotopic stages 16 and 15 will allow enhanced understanding of mid-Plei stocene pluvial and interpluvial events in the western United States.