Tectonic versus volcanic origin of the summit depression at Medicine Lake Volcano, California

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Publication Type thesis
School or College College of Mines & Earth Sciences
Department Geology & Geophysics
Author Gwynn, Mark Leon
Title Tectonic versus volcanic origin of the summit depression at Medicine Lake Volcano, California
Date 2013-05
Description Medicine Lake Volcano is a Quaternary shield volcano located in a tectonically complex and active zone at the transition between the Basin and Range Province and the Cascade Range of the Pacific Province. The volcano is topped by a 7x12 km elliptical depression surrounded by a discontinuous constructional ring of basaltic to rhyolitic lava flows. This thesis explores the possibility that the depression may have formed due to regional extension (rift basin) or dextral shear (pull-apart basin) rather than through caldera collapse and examines the relationship between regional tectonics and localized volcanism. Existing data consisting of temperature and magnetotelluric surveys, alteration mineral studies, and core logging were compiled and supplemented with additional core logging, field observations, and fault striae studies in paleomagnetically oriented core samples. These results were then synthesized with regional fault data from existing maps and databases. Faulting patterns near the caldera, extension directions derived from fault striae P and T axes, and three-dimensional temperature and alteration mineral models are consistent with slip across arcuate ring faults related to magma chamber deflation during flank eruptions and/or a pyroclastic eruption at about 180 ka. These results are not consistent with a rift or pull-apart basin. Limited subsidence can be attributed to the relatively small volume of ash-flow tuff released by the only known major pyroclastic eruption and is inconsistent with the observed topographic relief. The additional relief can be explained by constructional volcanism. Striae from unoriented and oriented core, augmented by striae measurements in outcrop suggest that Walker Lane dextral shear, which can be reasonably projected from the southeast, has probably propagated into the Medicine Lake area. Most volcanic vents across Medicine Lake Volcano strike northsouth, suggesting they are controlled by crustal weakness related to Basin and Range extension. Interaction of dextral shear, Basin and Range extension, and the zone of crustal weakness expressed as the Mount Shasta-Medicine Lake volcanic highland controlled the location and initiation of Medicine Lake Volcano at about 500 ka.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Subject caldera; pull-apart basin; subsidence; tectonics; volcanism
Dissertation Institution University of Utah
Dissertation Name Master of Science
Language eng
Rights Management Copyright © Mark Leon Gwynn 2013
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 3,188,543 bytes
ARK ark:/87278/s6514d37
Setname ir_etd
ID 195872
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6514d37