kulshan caldera: a quaternary subglacial caldera in the north cascades, washington
DESCRIPTION
Kulshan caldera: A Quaternary subglacial caldera in the North Cascades, Washington. By Wes Hildreth, USGS presented by Megan Simpson. Cascade Range. Quaternary calderas are rare in Cascade Range (>1800 volcanoes, 3 calderas) Most Pacific arc ranges have many more - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Kulshan caldera: A Quaternary subglacial caldera in the North
Cascades, Washington
By Wes Hildreth, USGS
presented by Megan Simpson
Cascade Range
• Quaternary calderas are rare in Cascade Range (>1800 volcanoes, 3 calderas)
• Most Pacific arc ranges have many more
• Three Quaternary calderas are:– Holocene Crater Lake– Rockland ash– Kulshan
•4.5 X 8 km
•steep-walled, cylindroid
•>50 km3 of magma erupted
•collapsed and filled with >1000m of rhyodacite ignimbrite (explosive flow deposits)
•single event in early Pleistocene
•lies NE base of Mt. Baker, west of Mt. Shuksan
Location map
Geologic Setting
• Three types of precaldera rocks enclose the caldera– rocks from the Chilliwack group (metavolcanic,
metasedimentary) north, south end– Nooksack Formation (argillite, sandstone,
conglomerate) west end– Lake Ann stock (granodiorite) east end
• During collapse, these materials became incorporated into intracaldera ignimbrite
Basement:
KJn Nooksack, mvs Chilliwack, gd granodiorite plutons (+)
glacial erosion at Table Mt, Lasiocarpa Rdg
* indicate andesite vents
Geologic Map of Kulshan
Geologic Cross Section
Lookout! A Glacier!• Topography has been obscured because of
glacial erosion (Pleistocene Cordilleran ice sheet)
• Ice spread southward from British Columbia– lowered rim of basement rocks– stripped precaldera lavas– removed outflow– produced 1180m of intercaldera relief
Intracaldera Ignimbrite• Massive, unstratified, pumice-rich tuff
• Mostly white to pale gray, poorly sorted, structureless
• Product of single collapse and fill (probably took only a few hours)
• Original surface preserved near south margin
• Eroded elsewhere, incised by gorges
• Probably exceeded 30km3
Mount Baker
Within the walls...• Collapse breccias
• Dispersed lithic fragments
• Pumice
• Upper tuff is unusually fine-grained
• Units grade upward into ash
Fallout• Caldera eruptions always produce tons of fall
deposits - usually 20% of total volume erupted
• In North Cascades, no fallout survived because of glacial erosion
• But most likely fell over vast area of Canada and US
• Recognized only in southern Puget lowland (~200km south)-Lake Tapps tephra
Lake Tapps tephra
• East of Tacoma
• Most likely from Kulshan caldera fallout– mineral assemblage identical to intracaldera
pumice– microprobe analysis of glass is chemical match
• Consists of unreworked primary fallout
• Volume of fallout difficult to estimate, but probably represents ~ 33km3 of magma
Lake Tapps Cont.
• Deposited in periglacial settings• Ash layer rests on glacial outwash or is within
lacustrine sequences of laminated silt and clay• Pollen indicates herb-dominated tundra
environment• Authors believe eruptive center of North
Cascades completely covered by ice sheet-this explains lack of ash in the north
Intracaldera Sediments• ash-dominated
• thick as 120m
• overlie fine-grained ignimbrite in the SW
• rich in calcite, clays and pyrite
• cut by numerous andesitic and silicic dikes
• no evidence for fluvial, beach, glacial processes has been seen
• main facies suggest steep-walled basins
• sediments from ignimbrite rim and crumbling walls
Postcaldera Rhyodacite Lavas• rest directly on intracaldera ignimbrite and ashy sediments
• original extent may have been up to 12 km2
• compositionally, similar to pumice
• massive and slabby/blocky jointed
• glacial erosion stripped most away or badly altered
• age range of 1.1-1.0 Ma
Postcaldera Andesites• at least 50 dikes cut ignimbrite, sediments
and rhyo-lavas
• olivine, pyroxene, and hornblende andesite
• no systematic orientation
• many contain pyrite
• none extend out of caldera fill
Structure of Kulshan
• steep-walled cylindroid• was filled with ignimbrite during brief,
continuous event• not known if subsided in piecemeal or piston
fashion• scarcity of lithic fragments in ignimbrite
suggests relative coherence• not resurgent
Kulshan
Migration of Magma
• magma moving southwestward for the past 4 my
• moved from Hannegan caldera in NE (4 Ma) to Lake Ann (2.7 Ma) to Kulshan (1.1 Ma) to Black Buttes-Mt. Baker (0.5 Ma)
• represents rate of 5-6 mm/yr
Conclusion
• Question: why are there only three Quaternary calderas in the Cascade arc? These factors may play a role:– Cascade crust thicker than most– plate convergence relatively slow– key may be to understand processes that favor
upper-crustal storage over magma throughput but MORE STUDY IS NEEDED