Posted on 04/29/2021 9:31:37 AM PDT by Roman_War_Criminal
A group of University of Wyoming professors and students has identified an unusual belt of igneous rocks that stretches for over 2,000 miles from British Columbia, Canada, through Idaho, Montana, Nevada, southeast California and Arizona to Sonora, Mexico.
“Geoscientists usually associate long belts of igneous rocks with chains of volcanoes at subduction zones, like Mount Shasta, Mount Hood, Mount St. Helens and Mount Rainer,” says Jay Chapman, an assistant professor in UW’s Department of Geology and Geophysics.
“What makes this finding so interesting and mysterious is that this belt of igneous rocks is located much farther inland, away from the edge of the continent, and doesn’t contain any evidence for producing volcanoes. In fact, all of the melting to generate the igneous rocks originally took place deep underground, five to 10 miles beneath the surface.”
The new scientific paper is a result of a special course taught by Simone Runyon, an assistant professor in UW’s Department of Geology and Geophysics, and Chapman. Runyon, six UW graduate students and one undergraduate student, who took part in the course, are co-authors of the paper.
“It was really fascinating to start with a scientific question in a classroom, then collect and analyze data, and eventually publish our results,” says Cody Pridmore, a UW graduate student from Orange, Calif., and co-author of the paper. “It’s a process most college students don’t get to experience.”
Learn more about the geology of the Pacific Northwest here…
Possible origins One clue to the origin of the belt of igneous rocks is that the rocks chiefly formed 80 million to 50 million years ago, during a mountain-building event called the Laramide orogeny.
“The Laramide orogeny created most of the major mountain ranges we have in Wyoming, and the name actually comes from the Laramie Range,” Chapman says. “Although there are no igneous rocks of this type and age present in those mountains, we suspect that the tectonic processes that created the mountains also contributed to melting Earth’s crust.”
The researchers have several working hypotheses about what caused the rocks to melt. One hypothesis is that water infiltrated the deep crust.
“The geochemistry of these rocks indicates that melting may have occurred at relatively low temperatures, below 800 degrees Celsius,” says Jessie Shields, a Ph.D. student at UW from Minneapolis, Minn., who is working to solve this mystery. “That is still very hot, but not hot enough to produce very large volumes of magma. Water lowers the melting point of rocks, similar to how salt lowers the melting point of ice, and could increase the amount of magma generated.”
This work has implications for what causes rocks to melt and where specific types of magmas can be found.
“Many of the igneous systems in the study area contain economically important ore deposits,” says Runyon, who specializes in ore deposits. “Understanding the large-scale igneous processes that form these provinces helps us to better understand how ore deposits form and to better explore for natural resources.”
The location between Yellowstone and the volcanoes of Washington State can’t be just a coincidence, can it?
That is also where the ‘badlands’ are.
A lot of weird topology that looks like a giant flood of water suddenly washed over the area.
Just like ALL of north Africa (take a look) which has the ‘Eye of Africa’- a set of concentric rings that do not look natural (man-made?) and are similar to how Atlantis was described.
Since 3/4ths of the earth’s surface is water I bet a good sized meteor would displace a whole bunch of water.
Hey, if you claim to remember the '60s, you weren't there.
Transwomen and minorities hardest hit
I’m 57, I forgot the 80’s but, I did forget them never the less.
Funny because, I was 6 in 1970...my first recollection of wirrrled peas events was war prisoners coming home from Viet something-and Nixon resigning.
Only 57? I’m a little jealous. Don’t worry though, it gets worse before it gets, well, even worse. ;^)
The 'lunar origin' topics (the rest are listed in the last link below):
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