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Dive into the research topics where Carl E. Jacobson is active.

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Featured researches published by Carl E. Jacobson.


Geological Society of America Bulletin | 2017

Regional and temporal variability of melts during a Cordilleran magma pulse: Age and chemical evolution of the Jurassic arc, eastern Mojave Desert, California

Andrew P. Barth; J. L. Wooden; David A. W. Miller; Keith A. Howard; Lydia K. Fox; Elizabeth R. Schermer; Carl E. Jacobson

Intrusive rock sequences in the central and eastern Mojave Desert segment of the Jurassic Cordilleran arc of the western United States record regional and temporal variations in magmas generated during the second prominent pulse of Mesozoic continental arc magmatism. U/Pb zircon ages provide temporal control for describing variations in rock and zircon geochemistry that reflect differences in magma source components. These source signatures are discernible through mixing and fractionation processes associated with magma ascent and emplacement. The oldest well-dated Jurassic rocks defining initiation of the Jurassic pulse are a 183 Ma monzodiorite and a 181 Ma ignimbrite. Early to Middle Jurassic intrusive rocks comprising the main stage of magmatism include two high-K calc-alkalic groups: to the north, the deformed 183–172 Ma Fort Irwin sequence and contemporaneous rocks in the Granite and Clipper Mountains, and to the south, the 167–164 Ma Bullion sequence. A Late Jurassic suite of shoshonitic, alkali-calcic intrusive rocks, the Bristol Mountains sequence, ranges in age from 164 to 161 Ma and was emplaced as the pulse began to wane. Whole-rock and zircon trace-element geochemistry defines a compositionally coherent Jurassic arc with regional and secular variations in melt compositions. The arc evolved through the magma pulse by progressively greater input of old cratonic crust and lithospheric mantle into the arc magma system, synchronous with progressive regional crustal thickening.


International Geology Review | 2016

A two-stage fluid history for the Orocopia Schist and associated rocks related to flat subduction and exhumation, southeastern California

Gregory J. Holk; Marty Grove; Carl E. Jacobson; Gordon B. Haxel

ABSTRACT Stable isotopes combined with pre-existing 40Ar/39Ar thermochronology at the Gavilan Hills and Orocopia Mountains in southeastern California record two stages of fluid–rock interaction: (1) Stage 1 is related to prograde metamorphism as Orocopia Schist was accreted to the base of the crust during late Cretaceous–early Cenozoic Laramide flat subduction. (2) Stage 2 affected the Orocopia Schist and is related to middle Cenozoic exhumation along detachment faults. There is no local evidence that schist-derived fluids infiltrated structurally overlying continental rocks. Mineral δ18O values from Orocopia Schist in the lower plate of the Chocolate Mountains fault and Gatuna normal fault in the Gavilan Hills are in equilibrium at 490–580°C with metamorphic water (δ18O = 7–11‰). Phengite and biotite δD values from the Orocopia Schist and upper plate suggest metamorphic fluids (δD ~ –40‰). In contrast, final exhumation of the schist along the Orocopia Mountains detachment fault (OMDF) in the Orocopia Mountains was associated with alteration of prograde biotite and amphibole to chlorite (T ~ 350–400°C) and the influx of meteoric-hydrothermal fluids at 24–20 Ma. Phengites from a thin mylonite zone at the top of the Orocopia Schist and alteration chlorites have the lowest fluid δD values, suggesting that these faults were an enhanced zone of meteoric fluid (δD < –70‰) circulation. Variable δD values in Orocopia Schist from structurally lower chlorite and biotite zones indicate a lesser degree of interaction with meteoric-hydrothermal fluids. High fluid δ18O values (6–12‰) indicate low water–rock ratios for the OMDF. A steep thermal gradient developed across the OMDF at the onset of middle Cenozoic slip likely drove a more vigorous hydrothermal system within the Orocopia Mountains relative to the equivalent age Gatuna fault in the Gavilan Hills.


Geological Society of America Special Papers | 2007

Exhumation of the Orocopia Schist and associated rocks of southeastern California: Relative roles of erosion, synsubduction tectonic denudation, and middle Cenozoic extension

Carl E. Jacobson; Marty Grove; Ana Vucic; Jane N. Pedrick; Kristin A. Ebert


Geological Society of America Special Papers | 2002

The Orocopia Schist in southwest Arizona: Early Tertiary oceanic rocks trapped or transported far inland

Gordon B. Haxel; Carl E. Jacobson; Stephen M. Richard; Richard M. Tosdal; Michael J. Grubensky


112th Annual GSA Cordilleran Section Meeting | 2016

SERPENTINITE-HOSTED NICKEL, IRON, AND COBALT SULFIDE, ARSENIDE, AND INTERMETALLIC MINERALS IN AN UNUSUAL TECTONIC SETTING, SOUTHWEST ARIZONA

Gordon B. Haxel; James H. Wittke; Gabe S. Epstein; Carl E. Jacobson


Archive | 2018

SOURCE OF EOCENE SEDIMENT TRANSPORTED THROUGH THE BREACHED MOJAVE SEGMENT OF THE MID-CRETACEOUS CALIFORNIA BATHOLITH: CONSTRAINTS FROM COUPLED PB ISOTOPIC AND AR-AR AGE RESULTS FROM DETRITAL K-FELDSPAR

Danielle Ziva Shulaker; Marty Grove; Nicholas J. Van Buer; Keith A. Howard; Andrew P. Barth; Carl E. Jacobson; Glenn R. Sharman


Archive | 2018

CONTINUITY OF THE CHOCOLATE MOUNTAINS ANTICLINORIUM LIMITS NEOGENE FAULT DISPLACEMENT IN SOUTHEAST CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWEST ARIZONA

L. Sue Beard; Gordon B. Haxel; Carl E. Jacobson; Ryan S. Crow


Archive | 2018

SIGNIFICANCE OF NORTHEAST-SOUTHWEST ORIENTATION OF PROGRADE LINEATION IN THE PELONA-OROCOPIA-RAND-SCHIST LOW-ANGLE SUBDUCTION COMPLEX, SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA AND SOUTHWEST ARIZONA

Gordon B. Haxel; L. Sue Beard; Carl E. Jacobson


Archive | 2018

FORMATION OF INTERMEDIATE AND ULTRABASIC METASOMATIC ROCKS WITHIN A REACTION ZONE SURROUNDING SUBDUCTED PERIDOTITE, CEMETERY RIDGE, SOUTHWEST ARIZONA

Gabe S. Epstein; Gordon B. Haxel; James H. Wittke; Carl E. Jacobson


Archive | 2018

LATE CRETACEOUS–PALEOGENE TECTONIC AND PALEOGEOGRAPHIC EVOLUTION OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BASED ON DETRITAL ZIRCON FROM THE FOREARC BASIN, PELONA-OROCOPIA-RAND SCHISTS, AND FRANCISCAN COMPLEX

Carl E. Jacobson; Glenn R. Sharman; Jeremy K. Hourigan; Marty Grove; Scott M. Johnston; Andrew P. Barth; Gordon B. Haxel; Raymond V. Ingersoll; Alan D. Chapman; Jeffrey L. Howard; Joseph L. Wooden

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Gordon B. Haxel

United States Geological Survey

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Scott M. Johnston

California Polytechnic State University

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Gregory J. Holk

California State University

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Joseph L. Wooden

Indiana University Bloomington

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Keith A. Howard

United States Geological Survey

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Ryan S. Crow

University of New Mexico

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