Some implications of late Cenozoic volcanism to geothermal potential in the High Lava Plains of south-central Oregon

1974 ◽  
Author(s):  
George Walton Walker
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Connor J. Smith ◽  
◽  
Thomas E. Lachmar ◽  
John W. Shervais ◽  
James P. Evans ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Yucel Yilmaz

The island of Cyprus constitutes a fragment of southern Anatolia separated from the mainland by left-oblique transtension in late Cenozoic time. However, a geological framework of offset features of the south-central Anatolia, for comparison of Cyprus with a source region within and west of the southeastern Anatolian suture zone, has not yet been developed. In this paper, I enumerate, describe, and compare a full suite of potentially correlative spatial and temporal elements exposed in both regions. Northern Cyprus and south-central Anatolia have identical tectonostratigraphic units. At the base of both belts, crop out ophiolitic mélange-accretionary complex generated during the northward subduction of the NeoTethyan Oceanic lithosphere from the Late Cretaceous until the end of middle Eocene. The nappes of the Taurus carbonate platform were thrust above this internally chaotic unit during late Eocene. They began to move as a coherent nappe pile from that time onward. An asymmetrical flysch basin was formed in front of this southward moving nappe pile during the early Miocene. The nappes were then thrust over the flysch basin fill and caused its tight folding. Cyprus separated from Anatolia in the Pleistocene-Holocene when, transtensional oblique faults with dip-slip components caused the development of the Adana and Iskenderun basins and the separation of Cyprus from Anatolia.


2020 ◽  
Vol 141-142 ◽  
pp. 101779
Author(s):  
Morteza Khalatbari Jafari ◽  
Nafiseh Salehi Siavashani ◽  
Hassan A. Babaie ◽  
Wenjiao Xiao ◽  
Mohammad Faridi ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 227-243 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petru T. Negraru ◽  
David D. Blackwell ◽  
Kamil Erkan

1971 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.W. Johnson ◽  
D.E. Mackenzie ◽  
I.E. Smith

Minerals ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 612
Author(s):  
Alexander Perepelov ◽  
Mikhail Kuzmin ◽  
Svetlana Tsypukova ◽  
Yuri Shcherbakov ◽  
Sergey Dril ◽  
...  

The paper presents new data on mineralogy, geochemistry, and Sr-Nd-Pb isotope systematics of Late Cenozoic eruption products of Uguumur and Bod-Uul volcanoes in the Tesiingol field of Northern Mongolia, with implications for the magma generation conditions, magma sources, and geodynamic causes of volcanism. The lavas and pyroclastics of the two volcanic centers are composed of basanite, phonotephrite, basaltic trachyandesite, and trachyandesite, which enclose spinel and garnet peridotite and garnet-bearing pyroxenite xenoliths; megacrysts of Na-sanidine, Ca-Na pyroxene, ilmenite, and almandine-grossular-pyrope garnets; and carbonate phases. The rocks are enriched in LILE and HFSE, show strongly fractioned REE spectra, and are relatively depleted in U and Th. The low contents of U and Th in Late Cenozoic volcanics from Northern and Central Mongolia represent the composition of a magma source. The presence of carbonate phases in subliquidus minerals and mantle rocks indicates that carbon-bearing fluids were important agents in metasomatism of subcontinental lithospheric mantle. The silicate-carbonate melts were apparently released from eclogitizied slabs during the Paleo-Asian and Mongol-Okhotsk subduction. The parent alkali-basaltic magma may be derived as a result from partial melting of Grt-bearing pyroxenite or eclogite-like material or carobantized peridotite. The sources of alkali-basaltic magmas from the Northern and Central Mongolia plot different isotope trends corresponding to two different provinces. The isotope signatures of megacrysts are similar to those of studied volcanic centers rocks. The P-T conditions inferred for the crystallization of pyroxene and garnet megacrysts correspond to a depth range from the Grt-Sp phase transition to the lower crust. Late Cenozoic volcanism in Northern and Central Mongolia may be a response to stress propagation and gravity instability in the mantle associated with the India-Asia collision.


2009 ◽  
Vol 177 (2) ◽  
pp. 783-805 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. T. Walker ◽  
P. Gans ◽  
M. B. Allen ◽  
J. Jackson ◽  
M. Khatib ◽  
...  

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