EXTENDING THE CRB PROVINCE INTO SOUTHEASTERN OREGON: A REEVALUATION OF FLOOD-BASALT VOLUME, EFFUSION RATES, REGIONAL CORRELATIONS, AND VOLCANIC MIGRATIONS
Field, petrochemical, and limited paleomagnetic data demonstrate a rapid northward migration of both volcanism and uplift, from Steens Mountain, through eastern Oregon, and across the length of the Chief Joseph dike swarm into eastern Washington. Using the recent Ar-Ar ages of Hooper et al. (2002), the lava accumulation rate for the southern eruptions of Steens, Imnaha, and Grande Ronde basalts (16.6-15.7 Ma) was ~56x103 km3/m.y. As volcanism migrated northward into the Chief Joseph dike swarm (16.1-15.0 Ma), the lava accumulation rate for Imnaha and Grande Ronde eruptions increased to ~164x103 km3/m.y. This migratory pattern appears to be contemporaneous with an opposing, southerly migration of magmatism along the Northern Nevada rift zone, as suggested by field considerations and paleomagnetic data (e.g., Glen and Ponce, 2002).
Like spokes on a wheel, both migrations emanate from the McDermitt caldera, which was also the center for two subsequent, less rapid, opposing migrations, associated with eastward-advancing eruptions along the Yellowstone hotspot track and westward-advancing eruptions along the Oregon High Lava Plains. These four volcanic migrations are remarkably distinct in their eruptive styles, tectonic expressions and volcanic products. Nevertheless, the genesis of each is not only consistent with a mantle-plume origin, but also difficult to reconcile by nonplume interpretations.