1 / 19

High Lava Plains Project

High Lava Plains Project. Matt Fouch Arizona State University School of Earth and Space Exploration 2007 EarthScope National Meeting, Monterey, CA MARGINS/GeoSwath Workshop. High Lava Plains Project: Understanding the Causes of Continental Intraplate Tectonomagmatism.

helenbass
Download Presentation

High Lava Plains Project

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. High Lava Plains Project Matt Fouch Arizona State University School of Earth and Space Exploration 2007 EarthScope National Meeting, Monterey, CA MARGINS/GeoSwath Workshop

  2. High Lava Plains Project:Understanding the Causes of Continental Intraplate Tectonomagmatism Arizona State University - Matt Fouch Carnegie Institution of Washington - Rick Carlson, David James Miami University - Bill Hart Massachusetts Institute of Technology - Tim Grove Oregon State University - Anita Grunder, Bob Duncan University of Oklahoma - Randy Keller University of Rhode Island - Chris Kincaid University of Texas, El Paso - Steve Harder Funded by NSF-Continental Dynamics

  3. Observations on Post-12 Ma Volcanism • Two migrating volcanic traces • Migrating volcanism defined by rhyolites • Basaltic activity continuous along both traces • Volcanism in HLP associated with right-lateral S-S faulting as B&R extension dies out to N

  4. Strong Temporal and Spatial Relationships with Basalt Composition • HLP basalts become more primitive with time • Composition shifts towards a high-Al tholeiite consistent with a very shallow mantle source • Primitive basalts across HLP show limited isotopic variation • Changes dramatically at border with Precambrian North America

  5. Isostatic Gravity • Eastern OR/WA show no gravity signal of underplated basalt, unlike SRP • Where are the fractionation products of 250,000 km3 of flood basalts and underplating expected with HLP volcanism?

  6. LOGISTICS:Local Contacts Essential • 2-pager (Jenda Johnson) • Town meetings / school visits • “Kicking dirt”

  7. Local Contacts Essential

  8. January, 2006 Installations

  9. Timeline: Seismic Component October 2005 Reconnaissance January 2006 Install Phase Ia (4 instruments) June 2006 Install Phase Ib (12 instruments) October 2006 Recon (19 sites; vaults constructed) April 2007 Recon (~60 sites) June 2007 Complete Phase I (102 stations) September 2008 Phase II (relocate ~70) Active source experiment Fall 2009 Demobilization Summers: “Friends of HLP” meetings

  10. Shear Wave Splitting Across the PNW • Very simple across most of region • Local complexity near Cascades and accreted terranes N=439

  11. Roth and Fouch, this meeting

  12. Opportunities from Dense Seismic Coverage Across the Pacific Northwest • Over 250 BB sites in addition to ~75 USArray and permanent stations

  13. Opportunities from Dense Seismic Coverage Across the Western U.S. • Over 400 BB sites in addition to USArray and permanent stations

  14. Observations on Neogene Volcanism • B&R and volcanism does not notice pC continental boundary • Volcanism concentrated at B&R margins, particularly Northern boundary • Volcanism does not obviously correlate with extension amount • Largest volume of basalt erupted well N of SRP; no associated silicic volcanism • Bimodal volcanism characteristic of HLP, SRP and B&R • ~4 Myr hiatus between flood basalts and beginning of rhyolite migrations

  15. January, 2006 Installations

  16. January, 2006 Installations

  17. Shear Wave Splitting Across the PNW • Very simple across most of region • Larger splitting times in southern Cascadia N=439

More Related