Duncan Foley
Pacific Lutheran University
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Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 1993
Wendell A. Duffield; Grant Heiken; Duncan Foley; Alfred S. McEwen
Abstract The synoptic view of broad regions of the Earths surface as displayed in Landsat and other satellite images has greatly aided in the recognition of calderas, ignimbrite plateaus and other geologic landforms. Remote-sensing images that include visual representation of depth are an even more powerful tool for geologic interpretation of landscapes, but their use has been largely restricted to the exploration of planets other than Earth. By combining Landsat images with digitized topography, we have generated regional oblique views that display compelling evidence for a previously undocumented late-Cenozoic caldera within the active volcanic zone of southwestern Guatemala. This “new” caldera, herein called Xela, is a depression about 30 km wide and 400–600 m deep, which includes the Quezaltenango basin. The caldera depression is breached only by a single river canyon. The caldera outline is broadly circular, but a locally scalloped form suggests the occurrence of multiple caldera-collapse events, or local slumping of steep caldera walls, or both. Within its northern part, Xela caldera contains a toreva block, about 500 m high and 2 km long, that may be incompletely foundered pre-caldera bedrock. Xela contains several post-caldera volcanoes, some of which are active. A Bouguer gravity low, tens of milligals in amplitude, is approximately co-located with the proposed caldera. The oblique images also display an extensive plateau that dips about 2° away from the north margin of Xela caldera. We interpret this landform to be underlain by pyroclastic outflow from Xela and nearby Atitlan calderas. Field mapping by others has documented a voluminous rhyolitic pumiceous fallout deposit immediately east of Xela caldera. We speculate that Xela caldera was the source of this deposit. If so, the age of at least part of the caldera is between about 84 ka and 126 ka, the ages of deposits that stratigraphically bracket this fallout. Most of the floor of Xela caldera is covered with Los Chocoyos pyroclastics, 84-ka deposits erupted from Atitlan caldera. Oblique images produced from digital data are unique tools that can greatly facilitate initial geologic interpretation of morphologically young volcanic (and other) terrains where field access is limited, especially because conventional visual representations commonly lack depth perspective and may cover only part of the region of interest.
1990 International Symposium on Geothermal Energy | 1990
Duncan Foley; Joseph N. Moore; Susan Lutz; Julio Palma; Howard Ross; Edgar Tobias; Alan Tripp
Open-File Report | 2014
Duncan Foley; Robert O. Fournier; Henry Heasler; Bern Hinckley; Steven E. Ingebritsen; David D. Susong
Geothermics | 2017
Bridget Y. Lynne; Henry Heasler; Cheryl Jaworowski; Duncan Foley; Ij Smith; Gj Smith; Dyah Sahdarani
Archive | 2016
Bridget Y. Lynne; Henry Heasler; Cheryl Jaworowski; Ij Smith; Gj Smith; Duncan Foley
2015 AGU Fall Meeting | 2015
Duncan Foley; Bridget Lynne; Cheryl Jaworowski; Henry Heasler; Gj Smith; Ij Smith
Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2018
Bridget Y. Lynne; Henry Heasler; Cheryl Jaworowski; Gj Smith; Ij Smith; Duncan Foley
Geothermics | 2018
Ij Smith; Bridget Y. Lynne; Cheryl Jaworowski; Ilyas Qasim; Henry Heasler; Duncan Foley
Archive | 2017
Bridget Y. Lynne; Gj Smith; Henry Heasler; Cheryl Jaworowski; Ij Smith; Duncan Foley; D Sahdarani
Archive | 2016
D Sahdarani; Bridget Lynne; Henry Heasler; Cheryl Jaworowski; Ij Smith; Gj Smith; Duncan Foley