Record Details

Title NEWLY-DISCOVERED, ANCIENT EXTRUSIVE RHYOLITE IN THE SALTON SEA GEOTHERMAL FIELD, IMPERIAL VALLEY, CALIFORNIA
Authors Jeffrey B. Hulen and Fred S. Pulka
Year 2001
Conference Stanford Geothermal Workshop
Keywords Salton Sea, rhyolites
Abstract Thick (150-300 m), ancient rhyolites and tuffs unambiguously erupted onto a paleosurface have been discovered beneath 1.7 km of clastic sedimentary strata in the eastern part of the Salton Sea geothermal field. The rhyolites are aphyric and flow-banded, and consist entirely of micropoikilitically devitrified glass. The tuffs contain accretionary lapilli, blocky glass shards, and sedimentary debris; they are interpreted as phreatomagmatic. Assuming an average sedimentation rate of 2.24 mm/yr for this part of the Salton trough (a figure based on occurrence of the petrographically distinctive, 0.76 Ma Bishop Tuff fallout deep in the nearby State 2-14 scientific borehole), the age of the new rhyolite is calculated to be about 0.73 Ma. A potentially valuable marker horizon, the new rhyolite is envisioned as part of a much larger buried dome field, perhaps analogous to the one now exposed above the Coso geothermal system about 390 km to the north.
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