Rocky Mountain Section–58th Annual Meeting (17–19 May 2006)

Paper No. 4
Presentation Time: 8:00 AM-11:40 AM

VOLCANIC STRATIGRAPHY OF THE FISH LAKE PLATEAU, UTAH


RHEUBOTTOM, Amber1, ROZIER, Grant2, WEBBER, Caroline E.3 and BAILEY, Christopher M.3, (1)Geological Sciences, California State Univ, 5500 University Parkway, San Bernardino, CA 92407, (2)Geology, Carleton College, Northfield, MN 55057, (3)Department of Geology, College of William & Mary, Williamsburg, VA 23187, rheubotan@hotmail.com

The Fish Lake Plateau in south-central Utah is predominantly underlain by a sequence of Tertiary volcanic rocks. Along the northwestern escarpment of the Fish Lake Hightop volcanic rocks are >600 m thick; to the southeast these units thin to ~250 m thick near Rabbit Valley at the eastern edge of the Fish Lake Plateau. The lowermost unit is composed of multiple welded ash-flow tuffs that collectively form a package up to 300 m thick that unconformably overlies the Flagstaff Limestone. These phenocryst-rich andesites are characterized by plagioclase, clino- and ortho-pyroxene, Fe-oxides, and iddingsite phenocrysts in a glassy, vesicle-poor matrix. The phenocryst-rich andesite is composed of 56-58% SiO2, 8-9% FeO, 5-6% CaO, and 6-7% Na2O + K2O. The overlying unit is a heterogeneous glass-rich phenocryst-poor trachyte up to 250 m thick. Plagioclase is the dominant phenocryst with minor clino- and ortho-pyroxene. The trachyte is composed of 65-67% SiO2, 4-5% FeO, 1-6% CaO, and 10% Na2O + K2O. The Osiris Tuff, a distinctive densely-welded porphyritic dacite with abundant biotite and minor quartz, caps the lower units. All Fish Lake volcanic units experienced a protracted pre-eruptive history as evidenced by magma mixing textures and post-eruptive deuteric alteration. The Fish Lake volcanic units are similar the regionally extensive 26-23 Ma Marysvale volcanics. At the southern edge of the Fish Lake Plateau younger olivine-bearing basalts, similar to those on the Awapa Plateau, unconformably overlie andesites, trachytes, and dacites.