Sevilleta metarhyolite

The Sevilleta metarhyolite is a geologic suite in central New Mexico. It has a radiometric age of 1665 ± 16 Ma, corresponding to the Statherian period.

Sevilleta metarhyolite
Stratigraphic range: Statherian
TypeSuite
Thickness4,500 ft (1,400 m)
Lithology
PrimaryRhyolite
OtherSchist, amphibolite
Location
Coordinates34.408°N 106.525°W / 34.408; -106.525
RegionLos Pinos Mountains, New Mexico
CountryUnited States
Type section
Named forSevilleta land grant, Socorro County, New Mexico
Named byStark and Dapples
Year defined1946

History of investigation

The unit was first defined by Stark and Dapples in 1959, during their mapping of the Los Pinos Mountains, as the Sevilleta rhyolite.[1] Condie and Budding called the unit the Sevilleta Formation in their 1979 work.[2] Bauer and Pollock called the unit the Sevilleta metarhyolite in their compilation of radiometric ages in 1993.[3]

Geology

The unit is a thick sequence of interbedded metarhyolites, pelitic schists, and amphibolites. The metarhyolite making up the bulk of the unit is a tan to dark red, glassy, fine-grained metarhyolite with abundant potassium feldspar phenocrysts. The modal composition is 25% quartz, 30% plagioclase, 40% potassium feldspar, 1% muscovite, 1% biotite, 1% epidote, 1% oxides, and 1% accessory minerals. Tccessory minerals include actinolite, chlorite, carbonate minerals, and zircon. Radiometric ages range from 1658 Ma to 1670 Ma with a consensus age of 1662±1 Ma.[4]

Similar beds are found in the Hell Canyon area of the northern Manzanita Mountains (34.892°N 106.403°W / 34.892; -106.403) and the Monte Largo Hills (35.183°N 106.278°W / 35.183; -106.278). However, the Hells Canyon outcrops may be older than the main exposures of the unit. [4]

The unit is interpreted as a product of caldera eruptions associated with the Mazatzal orogeny.[5]


Footnotes

  1. Stark and Dapples 1959
  2. Condie and Budding 1979
  3. Bauer and Pollock 1993
  4. Grambling et al. 2016, pp.169-170
  5. Grambling et al. 2016

References

  • Bauer, P.W.; Pollock, T.R. (1993). "Compilation of Precambrian isotopic ages in New Mexico". New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources Open File Report. 389.
  • Condie, K.C.; Budding, A.J. (1979). "Geology and geochemistry of Precambrian rocks, central and south-central New Mexico" (PDF). New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources Memoir. 35. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
  • Grambling, Tyler A.; Karlstrom, Karl E.; Holland, Mark E.; Grambling, Nadine L. (2016). "Proterozoic magmatism and regional contact metamorphism in the Sandia-Manzano Mountains, New Mexico, USA" (PDF). New Mexico Geological Society Field Conference Series. 67: 169–175. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
  • Stark, J. T.; Dapples, E. C. (1946). "GEOLOGY OF THE LOS PINOS MOUNTAINS, NEW MEXICO". Geological Society of America Bulletin. 57 (12): 1121. doi:10.1130/0016-7606(1946)57[1121:GOTLPM]2.0.CO;2.
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