1977
DOI: 10.3133/ofr77569
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Revised stratigraphy and radiometric ages of volcanic rocks and mineral deposits in the Marysvale area, west-central Utah

Abstract: The Marysvale area, Utah, is near the northeastern end of a broad belt of Tertiary igneous rocks that extends east-northeastward from southern Nevada to central Utah. In late Oligocene and early Miocene time (30-21 m.y.) a composite volcanic center consisting of numerous local volcanoes was active in the general Marysvale area. The volcanoes consisted ot near-source lava flows, volcanic breccias, and minor pyroclastic deposits of generally intermediate composition flanked by coalescing aprons of volcaniclastic… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…The alunite and jarosite replace intermediate composition volcanic rocks in several hydrothermally altered areas, roughly circular in plan and up to 3 km in diameter clustered around the 23 Ma Central Intrusive. K/Ar ages of alunite are coincident with that of the Central Intrusive which hosts the uranium deposits of the Central mining area (Steven et al, 1979). The jarosite has not been dated.…”
Section: Examples Of Steam-heated Jarosite Marysvale Ut: Steam-heatementioning
confidence: 93%
“…The alunite and jarosite replace intermediate composition volcanic rocks in several hydrothermally altered areas, roughly circular in plan and up to 3 km in diameter clustered around the 23 Ma Central Intrusive. K/Ar ages of alunite are coincident with that of the Central Intrusive which hosts the uranium deposits of the Central mining area (Steven et al, 1979). The jarosite has not been dated.…”
Section: Examples Of Steam-heated Jarosite Marysvale Ut: Steam-heatementioning
confidence: 93%
“…In the nearby Pahroc Range, an unusually large pile of andesitic lava and volcanic debris flows emplaced at about 28 Ma is as much as 1.3 km thick and extends along the range for about 15 km (Swadley et al 1995). Major composite volcanoes did develop in the Marysvale area of central Utah just to the east of the Great Basin during the middle Cenozoic (Steven et al 1979). The scarcity of large composite volcanoes, and accompanying mountainous relief, in the middle Cenozoic ignimbrite province contrasts with the character of the contemporaneous Southern Rocky Mountains volcanic field in southwestern Colorado, where the volume of lava and volcanic debris flows in such edifices exceeds that of ash-flow tuffs (Lipman and McIntosh 2008).…”
Section: Progressively Smoothed Terrainmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(Fleck and others, 1975) and flows of l a t i t e porphyry and quartz monzonite C1 inoptilol i t e Tuff (Miocene)-Poorly welded, crystal-poor altered ash-flow tuff Tuff of Albinus Canyon (Miocene)-Densely welded, crystal -poor ash-flow tuff (Steven and Cunningham, 1979; red tuff of Moore and Samberg, 1979) Three Creeks Tuff llenber of the Bullion Canyon vol canics (01 i gocene) -Densely welded, crystal-rich l a t i t e ash-flow tuff.…”
Section: Total Magnetic I N T E N S I T Y Map F O R T H E Cove Fort-smentioning
confidence: 99%