David R. Finn
University of California, Santa Cruz
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Geological Society of America Bulletin | 2016
Thomas Knott; Michael J. Branney; Marc K. Reichow; David R. Finn; Robert S. Coe; Michael Storey; Dan N. Barfod; Michael McCurry
The 1.95-km-thick Cassia Formation, defined in the Cassia Hills at the southern margin of the Snake River Plain, Idaho, consists of 12 refined and newly described rhyolitic members, each with distinctive field, geochemical, mineralogical, geochronological, and paleomagnetic characteristics. It records voluminous high-temperature, Snake River−type explosive eruptions between ca. 11.3 Ma and ca. 8.1 Ma that emplaced intensely welded rheomorphic ignimbrites and associated ash-fall layers. One ignimbrite records the ca. 8.1 Ma Castleford Crossing eruption, which was of supereruption magnitude (∼1900 km 3 ). It correlates regionally and exceeds 1.35 km thickness within a subsided, proximal caldera-like depocenter. Major- and trace-element data define three successive temporal trends toward less-evolved rhyolitic compositions, separated by abrupt returns to more-evolved compositions. These cycles are thought to reflect increasing mantle-derived basaltic intraplating and hybridization of a midcrustal region, coupled with shallower fractionation in upper-crustal magma reservoirs. The onset of each new cycle is thought to record renewed intraplating at an adjacent region of crust, possibly as the North American plate migrated westward over the Yellowstone hotspot. A regional NE-trending monocline, here termed the Cassia monocline, was formed by synvolcanic deformation and subsidence of the intracontinental Snake River basin. Its structural and topographic evolution is reconstructed using thickness variations, offlap relations, and rheomorphic transport indicators in the successive dated ignimbrites. The subsidence is thought to have occurred in response to incremental loading and modification of the crust by the mantle-derived basaltic magmas. During this time, the area also underwent NW-trending faulting related to opening of the western Snake River rift and E-W Basin and Range extension. The large eruptions probably had different source locations, all within the subsiding basin. The proximal Miocene topography was thus in marked contrast to the more elevated present-day Yellowstone plateau.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015
David R. Finn; Robert S. Coe; Henry Kelly; Michael J. Branney; Thomas Knott; Marc K. Reichow
Some of the field and laboratory expenses for this work were covered by the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) grant NE/G005372/1. The salary and school fees for the first author were covered in part by a National Science Foundation NSF grant (EAR 443549–81179) awarded to X. Zhao.
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2016
David R. Finn; Robert S. Coe
Static three-axis alternating field (AF) demagnetization is the most common method regularly implemented for removing magnetic components of rock samples. This method is so widely used that one of its main limitations, the acquisition of gyroremanence (GRM), is often not accounted for or even discussed. The presence of GRM likely interferes more than is recognized in accurate determination of the most stable remanence. The accepted method proposed by Dankers and Zijderveld (1981) for excluding GRM affected measurements requires nearly triple the amount of lab work, and by consequence, is almost never regularly implemented on large batches of samples. Here, we present a laboratory procedure and subsequent analysis (SI method) that removes the effects of GRM in static AF demagnetization without requiring extra laboratory work. This paper, therefore, describes a new standard protocol for efficient static AF demagnetization of rocks.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016
David R. Finn; Robert S. Coe; Ethan Brown; Michael J. Branney; Marc K. Reichow; Thomas Knott; Michael Storey; Bill Bonnichsen
In this paper, we present paleomagnetic, geochemical, mineralogical, and geochronologic evidence for correlation of the mid-Miocene Cougar Point Tuff (CPT) in southwest Snake River Plain (SRP) of Idaho. The new stratigraphy presented here significantly reduces the frequency and increases the scale of known SRP ignimbrite eruptions. The CPT section exposed at the Black Rock Escarpment along the Bruneau River has been correlated eastward to the Browns Bench escarpment (six common eruption units) and Cassia Mountains (three common eruption units) regions of southern Idaho. The CPT records an unusual pattern of geomagnetic field directions that provides the basis for robust stratigraphic correlations. Paleomagnetic characterization of eruption units based on geomagnetic field variation has a resolution on the order of a few centuries, providing a strong test of whether two deposits could have been emplaced from the same eruption or from temporally separate events. To obtain reliable paleomagnetic directions, the anisotropy of anhysteretic remanence was measured to correct for magnetic anisotropy, and an efficient new method was used to remove gyroremanence acquired during alternating field demagnetization.
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2016
Walter Schillinger; Eli R. Morris; Robert S. Coe; David R. Finn
We have constructed an alternating-field (AF) demagnetizer with a magnetic core in a passively air-cooled coil that can routinely operate at fields up to 0.5 T, almost 3 times higher than we could attain before in our commercial instrument. The field is powered by a commercial 1 kW power amplifier and is transverse to the bore, uniform to ±2% over a 25 mm paleomagnetic sample, and compatible with our existing sample handler for automated demagnetization and measurement. Even harmonics are ≤1 ppm of the fundamental and so generate negligible anhysteretic remanence. The much higher peak alternating field, 2 and 5 times that commonly available in air-core solenoidal and Helmhotz coil configurations, respectively, enables successful AF demagnetization of many samples that could not be completely demagnetized with commercially available equipment. This capability is especially useful for high-coercivity sedimentary and igneous rocks and extraterrestrial materials that contain magnetic minerals that alter during thermal demagnetization. In addition to the benefits, this instrument brings to our own research, a much broader potential impact is that it could replace the transverse coils of most automated AF demagnetization systems in use today, whether for discrete or continuous U-channel measurements, which are commonly limited to peak fields of ∼100 mT. Manual and tumbling demagnetizers would benefit as well by the ∼2 times increase in maximum field over those that can be attained by commercial solenoidal coils. Furthermore, we expect that it and similarly designed magnetic-core instruments will be capable of attaining even higher fields, of order 1 T.
Gondwana Research | 2012
Jingen Dai; Xixi Zhao; Chengshan Wang; Lidong Zhu; Yalin Li; David R. Finn
Bulletin of Volcanology | 2016
Thomas Knott; Marc K. Reichow; Michael J. Branney; David R. Finn; Robert S. Coe; Michael Storey; Bill Bonnichsen
GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, USA - 2017 | 2017
Thomas Knott; Marc K. Reichow; Michael J. Branney; David R. Finn; Robert S. Coe; Michael McCurry
GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, USA - 2017 | 2017
David R. Finn; Robert S. Coe; Michael J. Branney; Ethan Brown; Marc K. Reichow; Thomas Knott; Michael Storey; Bill Bonnichsen
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016
David R. Finn; Robert S. Coe; Ethan Brown; Michael J. Branney; Marc K. Reichow; Thomas Knott; Michael Storey; Bill Bonnichsen