Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-t5pn6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-23T22:12:22.381Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Correlation of a Volcanic Ash bed in Pleistocene Deposits near Mount Blanco, Texas, with the Guaje Pumice Bed of the Jemez Mountains, New Mexico1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Glen A. Izett
Affiliation:
U.S. Geological Survey, Denver, Colorado 80225
Ray E. Wilcox
Affiliation:
U.S. Geological Survey, Denver, Colorado 80225
Glenn A. Borchardt
Affiliation:
California Division of Mines and Geology, San Francisco, California 94111

Abstract

A rhyolitic volcanic ash bed about 0.3 m thick is exposed in a roadcut along Texas Highway 193 near Mount Blanco in the upper part of a sequence of Pleistocene sedimentary deposits at the type locality of the Blanco Formation, about 59 km northeast of Lubbock, Texas. This ash, here named informally the Guaje ash bed, has chemical and petrographic characteristics closely resembling those of the rhyolitic air-fall tephra (Guaje Pumice Bed) that directly underlies ash flows of Pleistocene age in the Jemez Mountains of northern New Mexico. The Guaje Pumice Bed and the ash flows belong to the Otowi Member of the Bandelier Tuff. Properties common to the Guaje ash bed and the Guaje Pumice Bed include: refractive index of glass, 1.497–1.498; microphenocrysts of quartz, sanidine (Or42–44), ferrohedenbergite (Fe51Ca42Mg7), chevkinite, allanite, zircon, and magnetite. Chemical composition of the glass of the Guaje ash bed matches that of the Guaje Pumice Bed for all major elements except K and Na and for trace elements determined by standard chemical analyses, atomic absorption, and neutron activation. Paleomagnetic measurements indicate that the ash has reverse depositional remanent magnetization. Glass shards of the ash have a fission-track age of about 1.4 ± 0.2 m. y. Sanidine from the Guaje Pumice Bed and its genetically related ash-flow sheet in the Jemez Mountains was K-Ar dated at about 1.4 m. y. by R. R. Doell and his colleagues in 1968. Correlation of the Guaje ash bed with the radiometrically dated Guaje Pumice Bed establishes a minimum age of about 1.4 m. y. for the Blanco Formation.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Academic Press, Inc.

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

1

Publication authorized by the Director, U.S. Geological Survey.

References

Bailey, R.A. Smith, R.L. Ross, C.S. 1969 Stratigraphic nomenclature of volcanic rocks in the Jemez Mountains, New Mexico U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 1274-P 19 Google Scholar
Christiansen, R.L. Blank, R.H. 1972 Volcanic stratigraphy of the Quaternary Rhyolite Plateau in Yellowstone National Park U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 729-B 18 Google Scholar
Christiansen, R.L. Obradovich, J.D. Blank, R.H. 1969 Late Cenozoic volcanic stratigraphy of the Yellowstone Park region—A preliminary report “Abstracts for 1968” Geological Society of America Special Paper 121 591 Google Scholar
Cox, Allan 1969 Geomagnetic reversals Science 163 237 245 Google Scholar
Dalrymple, G.B. Cox, Allan Doell, R.R. 1965 Potassium-argon age and paleomagnetism of the Bishop Tuff, California Geological Society of America Bulletin 76 665 674 Google Scholar
Dickinson, R.G. 1966 Geology of the Cerro Summit quadrangle, Montrose County, Colorado U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 117 Google Scholar
Doell, R.R. Dalrymple, G.B. Smith, R.L. Bailey, R.A. 1968 Paleomagnetism, potassium-argon ages, and geology of rhyolites and associated rocks of the Valles Caldera, New Mexico Studies in volcanology—A memoir in honor of Howel Williams Geological Society of America Memoir 116 211 248 Google Scholar
Eardley, A.J. 1967 Bonneville chronology: Correlation between the exposed stratigraphic record and the subsurface sedimentary succession Geological Society of America Bulletin 78 907 909 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eardley, A.J. Gvosdetsky, Vasyl 1960 Analysis of Pleistocene core from Great Salt Lake, Utah Geological Society of America Bulletin 71 1323 1344 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evans, G.L. 1948 Geology of the Blanco beds of West Texas Colbert, E.H. Pleistocene of the Great Plains Geological Society of America Bulletin 59 617 619 Google Scholar
Evans, G.L. 1949 Upper Cenozoic of the High Plains [Texas] West Texas Geological Society Guidebook Field Trip np. 2, Nov. 1949 1 9 Google Scholar
Evans, G.L. Meade, G.E. 1945 Quaternary of the Texas High Plains Texas University Publication 4401 485 507 Jan. 1, 1944Google Scholar
Evernden, J.F. Savage, D.E. Curtis, G.H. James, G.T. 1964 Potassium-argon dates and the Cenozoic mammalian chronology of North America American Journal of Science 262 145 198 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fleischer, R.L. Price, P.B. 1964 Glass dating by fission fragment tracks Journal of Geophysical Research 69 331 339 Google Scholar
Funnell, B.M. 1964 The Tertiary period Harland, W.B. Smith, A.G. Wilcock, Bruce The Phanerozoic time-scale — A Symposium Dedicated to Professor Arthur Holmes Geological Society of London Quarterly Journal supplement 120s 179 191 Google Scholar
Gilbert, C.M. 1938 Welded tuff in eastern California Geological Society of America Bulletin 49 1829 1862 Pt. 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hibbard, C.W. 1941 The Borchers fauna, a new Pleistocene interglacial fauna from Meade County, Kansas University of Kansas Science Bulletin 38 197 220 Pt. 7Google Scholar
International Association of Quaternary Research, 1965 Guidebook for Field Conference D, Central Great Plains — INQUA, 7th Cong. U.S.A. Nebraska Academy of Sciences Lincoln, Nebraska 124 Google Scholar
Izett, G.A. Wilcox, R.E. Powers, H.A. Desborough, G.A. 1970 The Bishop ash bed, a Pleistocene marker bed in the Western United States Quaternary Research 2 121 132 Google Scholar
Izett, G.A. Wilcox, R.E. Obradovich, J.D. Reynolds, R.L. 1971 Evidence for two Pearlette-like ash beds in Nebraska and adjoining areas Abstracts with Programs Geological Society of America 2 265 266 No. 4Google Scholar
McElhinny, M.W. 1967 Statistics of a spherical distribution Methods in Palaeomagnetism—NATO Advanced Study Inst. on Palaeomagnetic Methods, Univ. Newcastle ipon Tyne, 1964, Proceedings Elsevier Publishing Co New York 313 321 Google Scholar
Meade, G.E. 1945 The Blanco fauna [Pleistocene, Crosby Co., Texas] University of Texas Bureau of Economic Geology Publication 4401 309 556 Google Scholar
Miller, R.D. Van Horn, Richard Dobrovolny, Ernest Buck, L.P. 1964 Geology of Franklin, Webster, and Nuckolls Counties. Nebraska U. S. Geological Survey Bulletin 1165 91 Google Scholar
Naeser, C.W. Izett, G.A. Wilcox, R.E. 1971 Zircon fission-track ages of Pearlette-like volcanic ash beds in the Great Plains Abstracts with programs Geological Society of America 2 657 No. 7Google Scholar
Richmond, G.M. 1962 Quaternary stratigraphy of the La Sal Mountains, Utah U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 324 135 Google Scholar
Savage, D.E. Curtis, G.H. 1970 The Villafranchian stage-age and its radiometric dating Geological Society of America Special Paper 124 207 231 Google Scholar
Sheppard, R.A. Gude, A.J. III 1968 Distribution and genesis of authigenic silicate minerals in tuffs of Pleistocene Lake Tecopa, Inyo County, California U. S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 597 38 Google Scholar
Sheridan, M.F. 1968 Double cooling-unit nature of the Bishop Tuff in Owens Gorge, California Abstracts for 1967 Geological Society of America Special Paper 115 351 Google Scholar
Smith, R.L. Bailey, R.A. 1966 The Bandelier Tuff: A study of ash-flow eruption cycles from zoned magma chambers Bulletin Volcanologique 29 83 104 Google Scholar
Smith, R.L. Bailey, R.A. 1968 Resurgent cauldrons Studies in Volcanology—A memoir in honor of Howel Williams Geological Society of America Memoir 116 613 662 Google Scholar
Smith, R.L. Bailey, R.A. Ross, C.S. 1970 Geologic map of the Jemez Mountains, New Mexico U. S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Geologic Investigations Map I-571 Google Scholar
Strangway, D.W. 1970 History of the Earth's Magnetic Field McGraw-Hill Book Co New York 161 Google Scholar
Swineford, Ada 1949 Source area of Great Plains Pleistocene volcanic ash Journal of Geology 57 307 311 Google Scholar
Van Couvering, J.A. Miller, J.A. 1971 Late Miocene marine and non-marine time scale in Europe Nature (London) 230 559 563 Google Scholar
Wilcox, R.E. 1959 Use of the spindle stage for determination of principal indices of refraction of crystal fragments American Mineralogist 44 1272 1293 Google Scholar
Wilcox, R.E. 1962 Cherkasov's “focal screening” for determination of refractive index by the immersion method Proceedings of the International Microscopy Symposium 1960 [1962] McCrone Associates Chicago, Illinois 160 165 Google Scholar
Wilcox, R.E. Izett, G.A. Powers, H.A. 1970 The Yellowstone Park region as the source of the Pearlette-like ash beds of the Great Plains [Abstr.] American Quaternary Association, 1st Meeting Aug. 28–Sept. 1, 1970 151 Google Scholar
Wood, H.E. II Chaney, R.W. Clark, John Colbert, E.H. Jepsen, G.L. Reeside, J.B. Jr. Stock, Chester 1941 Nomeclature and correlation of the North American continental Tertiary Geological Society of America Bulletin 52 1 48 Google Scholar