GEOCHRONOLOGIC CONSTRAINTS ON EARLY CRETACEOUS DEPOSITION OF NONMARINE SEDIMENTS AND VOLCANICS, AND SYNPLUTONIC DEFORMATION, WESTERN SIERRA NEVADA BATHOLITH, CA
New mapping suggests that the Goldstein Peak protoliths were deposited on top of the siliciclastic-carbonate Lake Kaweah pendant. A minimum age for these Kings sequence rocks is provided by a 163±1.5 Ma quartz diorite intrusion. The Goldstein Peak-Lake Kaweah depositional contact has been significantly modified by sinistral shear along the 116±2 Ma, NNE-trending Stone Corral Shear Zone (SCSZ) and by syntectonic intrusion of pyroxene- and hornblende-rich gabbroids. A 112.5±1 Ma granodiorite truncates the northern end of the SCSZ. This pluton postdates the two, 123-to-115 Ma ring dike complexes of the Stokes Mountain region and coincides with an Ar-Ar date of 112.31 Ma, together marking the cessation of significant local magmatism and cooling from hornblende-hornfels facies peak metamorphic conditions.
Rocks of the Goldstein Peak pendant fill a gap in the geologic history of the western batholith south of the Fresno embayment (see Clemens-Knott et al., 2000 for references therein). The 163 Ma quartz diorite belongs to a Middle Jurassic mafic suite, interpreted as the roots of arc volcanoes intruded into the Foothills ophiolite belt. During the Late Jurassic Nevadan orogeny, a transtensional-transpressional zone cut the arc and was intruded by 155-to-148 Ma gabbroic-and-tonalitic, dikes of Owens Mountain. The onset of continental arc magmatism is recorded by 123-to-115 Ma mafic cumulates and ring dikes of Stokes Mountain. Rocks of the Goldstein Peak pendant, therefore, offer a partial record of nonmarine sedimentation, volcanism and magmatism that occurred during the 25-million-year-long period between local manifestation of the Nevadan orogeny and emergence of the Cretaceous arc.