Spelling suggestions: "subject:"metrology -- arizona."" "subject:"metrology -- orizona.""
51 |
Stratigraphy, petrology and depositional history of the Kaibab formation between Cameron and Desert View, Coconino County, ArizonaBrown, John W. (John William), 1949- January 1969 (has links)
No description available.
|
52 |
Stratigraphy and petrology of some mesozoic rocks in western ArizonaRobison, Brad Alan January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
|
53 |
Petrology and stratigraphy of the Scherrer Formation (Permian) in Cochise County, ArizonaLuepke, Gretchen, Luepke, Gretchen January 1967 (has links)
No description available.
|
54 |
The depositional environment and petrographic analysis of the Lower Cretaceous Morita Formation, Bisbee Group, southeastern Arizona and northern Sonora, MexicoJamison, Kermit January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
|
55 |
Petrology and structure of an exposure of the Pinal schist, Santa Catalina Mountains, ArizonaErickson, Rolfe Craig, 1936- January 1962 (has links)
No description available.
|
56 |
The relationship of cleavage in carbonate rocks to folding and faulting near Agua Verde Wash, Arizona: implications of volume lossCrespi, Jean Marie January 1982 (has links)
No description available.
|
57 |
Petrology of O'Leary Peak volcanics, Coconino County, ArizonaBladh, Katherine Laing, 1947- January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
|
58 |
Geologic history of an ash-flow sequence and its source area in the Basin and Range province of southeastern ArizonaMarjaniemi, Darwin Keith, 1940-, Marjaniemi, Darwin Keith, 1940- January 1970 (has links)
The tertiary history of the Chiricahua volcanic field of southeastern Arizona is essentially that of rhyolitic ash-flow deposition and concomitant block faulting in the period from 29 to 25 m.y., as determined by K-Ar analysis. The Rhyolite Canyon ash-flow sheet is the youngest of three sheets, each more than 1000 feet thick. Its distribution is limited mainly to the Chiricahua and northern Pedregosa Mountains with a lesser amount of deposits in the neighboring Swisshelm and Peloncillo Mountains. It is estimated that the original areal extent was of the order of 700 square miles and that the volume of deposits was around 100 cubic miles. The source area of the Rhyolite Canyon sheet is identified as a 13-mile diameter caldera, named the Turkey Creek caldera. This is the first major caldera of the Valles type described in the Mexican Highland and Sonoran Desert sections of the Basin and Range. It is unique because of its denudation. Erosion to 5000-foot depth locally has exposed thick sections of moat deposits and a fine grained monzonite pluton associated with central doming. Rhyolite Canyon tuff in the caldera, some 3000 feet thick, is domed and intruded by the monzonite. More than 1500 feet of tuff breccia, tuffaceous sediments, and rhyolite flows are exposed in the moat, along with 3000 feet of monzonite forming annular segments a couple miles wide abutting or overlying rocks forming the caldera wall. The most monzonite is similar to that in the dome and was emplaced amidst the period of deposition in the caldera. Petrographic and trace element analyses indicate a cogenetic relation between the Rhyolite Canyon sequence and the moat rhyolites. The K-Ar age of the Rhyolite Canyon tuff is very close to that of the monzonite. The ash-flow sheet immediately underlying the Rhyolite Canyon sheet is also very close in age as indicated by K-Ar analyses. Block faulting and tilting took place between the two sheets and also following the deposition of the Rhyolite Canyon sheet. There is evidence that the present basin-range structure was not established until after the Rhyolite Canyon sheet had been emplaced.
|
Page generated in 0.0561 seconds