Barry C. Moring
United States Geological Survey
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Geosphere | 2012
David A. John; Edward A. du Bray; Richard J. Blakely; Robert J. Fleck; Peter G. Vikre; Stephen E. Box; Barry C. Moring
The Middle to Late Miocene Bodie Hills volcanic field is a >700 km 2 , long-lived (∼9 Ma) but episodic eruptive center in the southern segment of the ancestral Cascades arc north of Mono Lake (California, U.S.). It consists of ∼20 major eruptive units, including 4 trachyandesite stratovolcanoes emplaced along the margins of the field, and numerous, more centrally located silicic trachyandesite to rhyolite flow dome complexes. Bodie Hills volcanism was episodic with two peak periods of eruptive activity: an early period ca. 14.7–12.9 Ma that mostly formed trachyandesite stratovolcanoes and a later period between ca. 9.2 and 8.0 Ma dominated by large trachyandesite-dacite dome fields. A final period of small silicic dome emplacement occurred ca. 6 Ma. Aeromagnetic and gravity data suggest that many of the Miocene volcanoes have shallow plutonic roots that extend to depths ≥1–2 km below the surface, and much of the Bodie Hills may be underlain by low-density plutons presumably related to Miocene volcanism. Compositions of Bodie Hills volcanic rocks vary from ∼50 to 78 wt% SiO 2 , although rocks with 2 are rare. They form a high-K calc-alkaline series with pronounced negative Ti-P-Nb-Ta anomalies and high Ba/Nb, Ba/Ta, and La/Nb typical of subduction-related continental margin arcs. Most Bodie Hills rocks are porphyritic, commonly containing 15–35 vol% phenocrysts of plagioclase, pyroxene, and hornblende ± biotite. The oldest eruptive units have the most mafic compositions, but volcanic rocks oscillated between mafic and intermediate to felsic compositions through time. Following a 2 Ma hiatus in volcanism, postsubduction rocks of the ca. 3.6–0.1 Ma, bimodal, high-K Aurora volcanic field erupted unconformably onto rocks of the Miocene Bodie Hills volcanic field. At the latitude of the Bodie Hills, subduction of the Farallon plate is inferred to have ended ca. 10 Ma, evolving to a transform plate margin. However, volcanism in the region continued until 8 Ma without an apparent change in rock composition or style of eruption. Equidimensional, polygenetic volcanoes and the absence of dike swarms suggest a low differential horizontal stress regime throughout the lifespan of the Bodie Hills volcanic field. However, kinematic data for veins and faults in mining districts suggest a change in the stress field from transtensional to extensional approximately coincident with the inferred cessation of subduction. Numerous hydrothermal systems were operative in the Bodie Hills during the Miocene. Several large systems caused alteration of volcaniclastic rocks in areas as large as 30 km 2 , but these altered rocks are mostly devoid of economic mineral concentrations. More structurally focused hydrothermal systems formed large epithermal Au-Ag vein deposits in the Bodie and Aurora mining districts. Economically important hydrothermal systems are temporally related to intermediate to silicic composition domes. Rock types, major and trace element compositions, petrographic characteristics, and volcanic features of the Bodie Hills volcanic field are similar to those of other large Miocene volcanic fields in the southern segment of the ancestral Cascade arc. Relative to other parts of the ancestral arc, especially north of Lake Tahoe in northeastern California, the scarcity of mafic rocks, relatively K-rich calc-alkaline compositions, and abundance of composite dome fields in the Bodie Hills may reflect thicker crust beneath the southern ancestral arc segment. Thicker crust may have inhibited direct ascent and eruption of mafic, mantle-derived magma, instead stalling its ascent in the lower or middle crust, thereby promoting differentiation to silicic compositions and development of porphyritic textures characteristic of the southern ancestral arc segment.
Geosphere | 2013
James G. Moore; Barry C. Moring
The 600-km-long Sierra Nevada underwent extensive Pleistocene glaciation except for its southernmost 100 km. Presently, ∼1700 small glaciers and ice masses near the crest of the range occur above 3250 m in elevation; these covered an area of ∼50 km 2 in 1972. Fourteen of the largest glaciers decreased by about one half in area during the period from 1900 to 2004. Rock glaciers, generally glacial ice covered by 1–10 m of rockfall debris, occur in about the same span of the range as ice and permanent snowfields. They are, on average, lower by 200–300 m, apparently because of the insulating layer of rocky rubble that protects their internal ice from the sun’s heat and from wind. The principal Pleistocene glacial stages are the Sherwin (ca. 820 ka), Tahoe (170–130 and ca. 70 ka), Tioga (14–28 ka), and Recess Peak (13 ka). Some 7040 glacial lakes, produced primarily by quarrying from bedrock, were mostly exposed after recession of the Tioga glacial stage. The lakes largely mark the area of primary snow accumulation. Below the lower limit of the lakes, ice flowed downward into river-cut canyons, forming major trunk glaciers within the zone of ablation. The range is in general a westward-tilted block upfaulted on its east side. Therefore, the main late Pleistocene trunk glaciers (Tahoe/Tioga) west of the crest extend 25–60 km, whereas those east of the crest extend only 5–20 km. Because of higher precipitation northward, glacial features such as the toes of existing glaciers and rock glaciers, as well as the late season present-day snowline, all decrease in elevation northward. Likewise, the elevation of the lower limit of glacial lakes, an indication of the zone of snow accumulation during the late Pleistocene, decreases about the same degree. This similarity suggests that the overall climate patterns of the late Pleistocene, though cooler, were similar to those of today. The east slope glaciers show a similar northward depression, but they are ∼500–1000 m higher. The upper part of the glacial system was erosive over a broad highland area as the evenly distributed ice in the accumulation zone moved to lower elevation. The abundant lake basins record this erosive action. The lower part of the glacier system was largely confined to major preexisting river canyons in which melting dominated. The average of rangewide estimates of the equilibrium line altitude (ELA)—the boundary between the upper snow and ice accumulation zone and the lower ablation zone—of many late Pleistocene glaciers parallels, and is only 200–300 m above, the altitude of the lower limit of the lakes. Hence, the lake zone provides a means of estimating the ELA.
Archive | 1988
Barry C. Moring; Norman J Page; R. L. Oscarson
The Pole Corral deposit (Red Mountain group) was selected for mineralogic studies because it contained some of the highest platinum-group element (PGE) contents found in a geochemical survey of 280 podiform chromite deposits in California and Oregon. The deposit is located about 11 airline km southwest from the town of Beegum, CA. It occurs in serpentinized dunite hosted by serpentinized harzburgite, part of a disrupted ophiolite, in the fault bounded Rattlesnake Creek terrane, which is a subdivision of the western Palaeozoic and Triassic belt of the Klamath Mountains province. Chromitite crops out on the walls of a prospect pit and consists of 25–50 mm, thick layers in dunite, disrupted by faulting and shearing, with an aggregate length of about 12 m. In 11 samples of chromitite, Pd, Pt, Rh, Ir and Ru, contents range from 1 to 15, 35 to 2530, 3 to 74, 70 to 2930, and 70 to 4930 ppb, respectively, and average 4·3, 271, 23, 999, and 1909 ppb, respectively. The mineralogy also indicates Os is present. Increased PGE contents are not associated with increased Cu (maximum 7ppm) or Ni (maximum 1500 ppm) contents, which suggests that the chromitites are poor in base-metal sulphides.
Scientific Investigations Report | 2008
James G. Moore; Mary A. Gorden; Joel E. Robinson; Barry C. Moring
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Open-File Report | 2008
Donald A. Singer; Vladimir I. Berger; Barry C. Moring
Open-File Report | 2005
Donald A. Singer; Vladimir I. Berger; Barry C. Moring
Economic Geology | 1986
Norman J Page; Donald A. Singer; Barry C. Moring; C.A. Carlson; Johnnie M. McDade; Stephen A. Wilson
Open-File Report | 2002
Donald A. Singer; Vladimir I. Berger; Barry C. Moring
Open-File Report | 2011
Vladimir I. Berger; Donald A. Singer; James D. Bliss; Barry C. Moring
Open-File Report | 2009
Vladimir I. Berger; Dan L. Mosier; James D. Bliss; Barry C. Moring