scholarly journals Supplemental Material: Linking exhumation, paleo-relief, and rift formation to magmatic processes in the western Snake River Plain, Idaho, using apatite (U-Th)/He thermochronology

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kelsey F. Wetzel ◽  
Jessica R. Stanley

Table S1: Calculations of footwall exhumation and basin extension magnitudes in the western Snake River Plain. Figure S1: Figure illustrating regions of high-elevation, low-relief topography in the southern Idaho batholith.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kelsey F. Wetzel ◽  
Jessica R. Stanley

Table S1: Calculations of footwall exhumation and basin extension magnitudes in the western Snake River Plain. Figure S1: Figure illustrating regions of high-elevation, low-relief topography in the southern Idaho batholith.


1986 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 321-339 ◽  
Author(s):  
Owen K. Davis ◽  
John C. Sheppard ◽  
Susan Robertson

Ten sites near the Snake River Plain have consistent differences in their climatic histories. Sites at low elevation reflect the “early Holocene xerothermic” of the Pacific Northwest, whereas most climatic chronologies at high elevation indicate maximum warmth or aridity somewhat later, ca. 6000 yr ago. This elevational contrast in climatic histories is duplicated at three sites from the central Snake River Plain. For sites in such close proximity, the different chronologies cannot be explained by changes in atmospheric circulation during the late Quaternary. Rather, the differences are best explained by the autecology of the plants involved and the changing seasonal climate. The seasonal climatic sequence predicted by multiple thermal maxima explains the high- and low-elevation chronologies. During the early Holocene, maximum insolation and intensified summer drought in July forced low-elevation vegetation upward. However, moisture was not a limiting factor at high elevation, where vegetation moved upward in response to increased length of growing season coincident with maximum September insolation 6000 yr ago.


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