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| Mapped outcrops and known and inferred subsurface occurrences of Miocene volcanic rocks (orange colors), principal faults, and important drill holes (dots) draped on a shaded relief map of the study area. Geology and drill holes adapted from figure 1, p. 3. (Shaded relief base is digital elevation model, using 30-meter cell size, from the U.S. Geological Survey National Elevation Dataset (NED). Topography has vertical exaggeration of x2 and sun illumination from azimuth 315° and elevation 45°. For more information on the NED, see http://gisdata.usgs.gov/ned/.) |
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Abstract Volcanic
rocks, mostly basalts and some andesites, are interbedded with middle
Miocene strata and are overlain by younger rocks throughout the greater
part of the Los Angeles Basin, California. Roughly correlative flows,
previously dated radiometrically (or paleontologically) at about 16.4
to 10.7 Ma, crop out in five separate regions around the basin perimeter.
Los Angeles Basin volcanic rocks have special meaning because they offer
clues to tectonomagmatic events associated with onset of clockwise transrotation
of the western Transverse Ranges region and to the timing and locus of
the initial basin opening. Whole-rock
40Ar/39Ar dating of near-tholeiitic olivine basalts of the Topanga Formation
(Hoots, 1931) from three sites in the easternmost Santa Monica Mountains,
combined with 87Sr/86Sr dating of fossil carbonates from interstratified
marine beds at nine sites, establish a new age of 17.4 Ma for these oldest
known Topanga-age volcanics of the Los Angeles Basin. We also record three
new 40Ar/39Ar ages (15.3 Ma) from andesitic flows of the lower Glendora
Volcanics at the northeast edge of the basin, 70 km east of the Santa
Monica Mountains. A whole-rock determination of 17.2±0.5 Ma for
nearby altered olivine basalt in the unfossiliferous Glendora volcanic
sequence is questionable because of a complex 40Ar/39Ar age spectrum suggestive
of 39Ar recoil, but it may indicate an older volcanic unit in this eastern
area. We hypothesize that the 17.4-Ma volcanics in the eastern Santa Monica Mountains are an early expression of deep crustal magmatism accompanying the earliest extensional tectonism associated with rifting. The extremely thick younger volcanic pile in the western and central parts of the range may suggest that this early igneous activity in the eastern area was premonitory. Paleomagnetic declination data are needed to determine the pre-transrotational orientation of the eastern Santa Monica Mountains volcanic sequence. The new age determinations do not yield unequivocal support for either of two proposed explanations of possible age trends of Miocene volcanic rocks in southern California but underscore the need for further work. |
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