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Amalia Tuff

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A geologic formation in New Mexico

Amalia Tuff
Stratigraphic range: Oligocene
25.35–25.43 Ma PreꞒ O S D C P T J K Pg N
Amalia Tuff at its type area, near Amalia, New Mexico
TypeGeologic formation
Thickness2,500 m (8,200 ft)
Lithology
PrimaryIgnimbrite
Location
Coordinates36°56′45″N 105°27′45″W / 36.94583°N 105.46250°W / 36.94583; -105.46250
Region New Mexico
Country United States
Type section
Named forAmalia Post Office
Named byP.F. McKinlay
Year defined1956
Amalia Tuff is located in the United StatesAmalia TuffAmalia Tuff (the United States)Show map of the United StatesAmalia Tuff is located in New MexicoAmalia TuffAmalia Tuff (New Mexico)Show map of New Mexico

The Amalia Tuff is a geologic formation exposed in and around Questa, New Mexico. It has a radiometric age of 25.39 ± 0.04 million years, corresponding to the Oligocene epoch.

Description

The Amalia Tuff is a weakly to densely welded ash-flow tuff erupted during the formation of the Questa caldera 25.39 ± 0.04 million years ago (Ma), which erupted some 500–1,000 cubic kilometers (120–240 cu mi) of magma. It originally formed an outflow sheet 20–50 meters (66–164 feet) thick that extended as far as 45 kilometers (28 miles) to the southwest and 25 kilometers (16 miles) to the northeast. Within the caldera the tuff pooled to a depth of 1,000–2,000 meters (3,300–6,600 feet). The tuff appears to be a single cooling unit.

The tuff is silicic and alkaline, though its silica content of 77-80% likely reflects some secondary silicification. It contains 10-20% quartz and alkali feldspar phenocrysts. Rare occurrences of a vitrophyric tuff at the base of the main bed contain ferrohedenbergite and fayalite, while the upper beds sometimes preserve sodic amphibole phenocrysts. The intracaldera tuff contains lenticular megabreccia blocks up to 1,000 meters (0.62 miles) across. The tuff includes a lithic-rich lower facies that is nonwelded to partially welded and up to 30 meters (98 feet) thick. This contains up to 5% andesite and sparse Proterozoic rock fragments. This grades into the main bed of the formation.

Ar-Ar dating of the tuffs and associated plutons indicates the magma that formed the tuff was not generated in place in the upper crust. Isotope evidence suggests the original basaltic magma assimilated considerable crust material and underwent crystal fractionation at a deeper level of the crust than that of the magma chamber responsible for the Questa eruption.

  • Sample of Amalia Tuff from the type area, Amalia, New Mexico Sample of Amalia Tuff from the type area, Amalia, New Mexico
  • Exposure of intracaldera Amalia Tuff at mouth of Cabresto Canyon Exposure of intracaldera Amalia Tuff at mouth of Cabresto Canyon
  • A fragment of Amalia Tuff from an outcropping near Petaca, New Mexico A fragment of Amalia Tuff from an outcropping near Petaca, New Mexico

History of investigation

The unit was first designated the Amalia Formation in 1956 by P.F. McKinlay. As originally defined, it included basalt flows and sedimentary beds dating from before the Questa eruption. These were removed from the unit definition by Lipman in 1983, who restricted the unit to the densely welded tuff outflow sheet from the Questa eruption and renamed the unit the Amalia Tuff.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Lipman & Reed 1989.
  2. ^ Zimmerer & McIntosh 2012.
  3. Johnson, Shannon & Fridrich 1989.
  4. ^ Lipman 1983.
  5. Johnson & Lipman 1988.
  6. McKinlay 1956.

References

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