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Witkosky 1 1 Understanding the Growth and Construction of Earth’s 2 Continental Crust Through Pluton Emplacement in the 3 Trinity Alps, Klamath Mountains, California 4 Ryan D. Witkosky1, advisor: Dr. Richard Heermance1 5 1 6 Nordhoff Street, Northridge, California, 91330-8266 7 ABSTRACT 8 9 Department of Geological Sciences, California State University, Northridge, 18111 Plutons make up a significant volume of the Earth’s crust, and their emplacement can hydrothermally alter surrounding basement, which is often related to the genesis of 10 economic minerals. Despite their importance and relevance to various disciplines (i.e. 11 historical and economic geology), there is debate over how plutons are assimilated into 12 the crust. The paradigm suggests that a pluton forms in a singular episode as a large, 13 unified body of magma, intruding into country rock and forcing the alignment of mineral 14 grains along its boundary. In contrast, more recent models propose that the 15 emplacement process is a series of multiple intrusions; a network of dikes that are 16 integrated over time to make up the totality of the structure. Each model has unique 17 implications, which I test on the Canyon Creek pluton from the Trinity Alps region of the 18 Klamath Mountains in northern California. Geologic mapping and structural 19 measurements show that this pluton contains an abundance of interconnected dikes, 20 with a 50-100 m wide zone of brittle deformation along its boundary. This diffuse zone of 21 brecciation along the margin has recorded a history of fracturing and diking during 22 emplacement, with enclaves up to 30 m in diameter that have been isolated while Witkosky 2 23 maintaining an orientation parallel to that of the wall rock. Wall rock foliation is cut 24 obliquely by the plutonic contact, which discredits the notion of forceful emplacement 25 (i.e. balloon-like diapiric rise of a large, buoyant magma chamber). Also, enclaves in the 26 contact zone do not show any evidence of partial melting or recrystallization caused by 27 contact with hot, intruding magma. My field data lacks evidence for any ductile 28 deformation in rocks along the contact zone, and supports a hypothesis that this pluton 29 was emplaced at a shallow depth (roughly 5-10 km, the brittle realm) in a series of 30 small, incremental molten injections. Furthermore, petrographic thin section analyses do 31 not show alignment of mineral grains in rock samples collected along the margin, which 32 would be consistent with the forceful emplacement of a single magma body. Future 33 work will use radiometric zircon dating on rock samples collected from the dikes and 34 main body of the pluton. If the dikes yield crystallization ages within several million 35 years of the main plutonic body, then this will further support the multiple stage-building 36 hypothesis. 37 INTRODUCTION 38 Continental crust has developed over geologic time, in part by pluton 39 emplacement where magma cools slowly at depth. Large igneous intrusions account for 40 the creation of continental crust in the sub-surface realm, and are often associated with 41 ore deposits and other resources. Thus, understanding how plutons are emplaced is a 42 fundamental aspect to both historical and economic geology. The process of 43 emplacement, however, is poorly understood, mainly for two reasons. The first reason is 44 that the process takes place deep underground where direct observations cannot be 45 made in documenting the complete sequence of events that occurs during Witkosky 3 46 emplacement. The second reason is that the timeline of emplacement is on a scale 47 much greater than the lifespan of human beings, which makes a complete step-by-step 48 record impossible for attempts at documenting the mechanisms involved. Nevertheless, 49 we can still use evidence from past emplacement episodes to make interpretations 50 regarding the deformation that takes place during this process. Plutonic intrusions are 51 also without a doubt associated with hazardous volcanic and seismic activity, which 52 means that understanding emplacement processes can have benefits in assessing 53 contemporary igneous activity along with its effects on civilization. 54 The emplacement of large molten bodies in the Earth’s crust is a process that 55 has been studied by geologists for many centuries. Throughout history, field evidence 56 has been the main mode of guidance used in deductive interpretations about the 57 emplacement process. Studying images of a contact zone can also be used to carry out 58 a qualitative analysis for depth of emplacement by noting whether the primary 59 interactions between host rock and the intrusive body show signs of brittle or ductile 60 behavior. With an understanding of the established geothermal gradient, structural clues 61 in the contact zone can generally lead to one of two interpretations: either a pluton is 62 emplaced in shallow crust, where conditions are cold and rocks tend to be brittle (at a 63 depth of roughly 5-10 km), or in the deeper, ductile realm (>10 km) where higher 64 temperatures and pressures increase malleability, and intrusive forces cause rocks to 65 deform plastically. In this study, I followed in the footsteps of my predecessors by 66 rigorously documenting the contact zone between an intrusive body and its host rock. 67 My field notes, accompanying sketches, and photographs were then used to infer the 68 depth of emplacement for the pluton in question. Witkosky 4 69 The classic paradigm for pluton emplacement suggests that a large magma 70 chamber buoyantly rises into the upper crust where it cools and solidifies as a unified 71 body in a geologically short time period (<1 million years; please see Figure 1). This 72 fundamental model seen in most geology textbooks has engendered unresolvable 73 debates over how a massive amount of space, or room, can be accommodated for the 74 emplacement of a pluton into solid crust (the so called “room problem”). Moreover, 75 contemporary seismological investigations, have failed to locate the presence of large, 76 liquid (i.e. magma) bodies in mid-ocean ridge volcanic hot spots, zones that typically 77 have been believed to harbor the presence of diapirs (Detrick et al., 1990). Additionally, 78 geochronologic data from radiometric analyses within individual plutons show ages 79 varying up to 10 million years, giving rise to a more recent but alternative viewpoint, 80 which suggests that plutons may form incrementally by dike emplacement over millions 81 of years (Glazner et al., 2004). Field studies have since shown more evidence that the 82 notion of incremental building episodes spanning several million years is a plausible 83 mechanism for the formation and emplacement of plutons (Belcher and Kistners, 2006; 84 Burchardt et al., 2012). 85 The purpose of this study is to view the classic paradigm and the modern 86 incremental building model as two separate but testable hypotheses. In order to be 87 objective, I searched for evidence that might support either hypothesis. I tested the 88 validity of the paradigm by searching for a discrete contact between a pluton and its 89 host rock. If the paradigm is correct, then measuring structural attitudes in the host rock 90 should yield some type of consistent regional pattern that changes and becomes 91 parallel to a sharp plutonic contact (as you approach the contact from the exterior). Witkosky 5 92 Following the paradigm, this abrupt contact should also be characterized by plutonic 93 rocks in situ near the margin that have a preferred grain orientation parallel to the sub- 94 planar contact surface between the pluton and its host rock. The abrupt change in 95 structural attitude and preferred grain orientation are contributed to forces created by 96 the upwelling of a large liquid magma chamber as it rises into the upper crust, 97 pervasively heating up and deforming its host rock (Figure 1: diapirism). As the diapir 98 swells upward and needs room for accommodation, mineral grains along the boundary 99 are forced into a preferential alignment by the balloon-like action of hot, buoyant, liquid 100 magma, and one would expect to find a thick contact aureole (on the scale of tens of 101 meters), where the transfer of heat as a pluton cools has caused extensive partial 102 melting and recrystallization of the host rock. 103 Any evidence of ballooning or diapirism would support the paradigm, but in order 104 for this study to be neutral with respect to the competing hypotheses, I also tested the 105 validity of the incremental building hypothesis by looking for an abundance of dikes 106 within the body of the pluton that disrupt the notion of a massive, homogeneous rock 107 mass. If the structural emplacement shows evidence that favors an interpretation of 108 multiple-stage construction, then the body of the pluton is expected to be composed of 109 many large dikes that have amalgamated to make up the totality of the structure. Hot 110 magma from dikes might also affect the host rock, but would cool and solidify very 111 rapidly when compared to the latent heat dissipated from a kilometer scale magma 112 body, resulting in the absence of a thick contact aureole. Locating and documenting the 113 orientation of abundant dike swarms within the body of a pluton would give merit to the 114 more recent incremental building hypothesis, and radiometric dating of rocks found in Witkosky 6 115 the dikes can further test the validity of this new model, by showing that the dikes have 116 crystallization and emplacement ages within several million years of the main body of a 117 pluton. 118 Understanding which model of pluton emplacement is correct, be it the classic 119 paradigm or the incremental building concept, is a fundamental aspect of Earth science 120 and has implications for future research. If the incremental building concept is found to 121 be viable, then dikes and other small, discrete magma chambers should be more 122 carefully considered while doing fieldwork and making geologic maps. Workers should 123 include the locations and orientations of any dikes found, while also collecting samples 124 for dating analyses. This will be relevant because dikes may play an important role in 125 the emplacement process, and should not tacitly be assumed to represent a much 126 younger, shorter-lived intrusive event. It is also beneficial to know whether diking may 127 be occurring if attempting to make geophysical images while documenting a portion of 128 the emplacement process in an actively evolving igneous system. Current knowledge 129 on the limits of seismic wave resolution can then be used to test hypotheses on sub- 130 surface magmatic deformation taking place and make accurate predictions regarding 131 how long recent or present-day igneous activity may last. 132 FIELD METHODS 133 A major component of this study is thorough geologic mapping along the contact 134 between a pluton and its host rock. Along with geologic mapping, I performed three 135 separate transects along the contact zone. The purpose of these transects were not 136 only to provide even further scaled documentation and measurements along the 137 boundary between pluton and host rock, but also to collect oriented hand samples of Witkosky 7 138 rocks in the contact zone. At least three oriented samples were collected from each 139 transect, in order to note, if present, a progressive sequence of deformation and 140 metamorphism as one travels from the interior of the pluton, through the contact zone, 141 and ending in host rock. Any planar surface on in-situ rocks were used to measure the 142 geographic orientation of the face, then the sample was carefully removed and 143 catalogued to be brought back to CSUN’s rock lab for thin section billet cutting. Billets 144 were cut parallel and perpendicular to the contact zone, and microprobe polished thin 145 sections were made for petrographic and scanning electron microscope (SEM) 146 analyses. In addition to features found within a pluton itself, any structural fabric (or lack 147 thereof) within or proximal to the contact zone can also shed light on the style of 148 emplacement, revealing whether the interaction between pluton and host rock was 149 warm and ductile or cold and brittle during emplacement. Detailed drawings along with 150 photographs and documentation of the contact zone provide for a qualitative analysis to 151 guide interpretations on depth of emplacement. 152 REGIONAL GEOLOGIC SETTING 153 The Klamath Mountains in northern California and Oregon are classified as the 154 orogenic product along a convergent margin between oceanic and continental 155 lithosphere (Irwin and Wooden, 1999). At least several hundred million years of east- 156 directed subduction and accretion along the boundary between the Pacific and North 157 American tectonic plates are recorded in four major belts of metamorphic rock that trend 158 roughly north-south and parallel to the tectonic boundary (Davis et al., 1965). The 159 metamorphic belts, or terranes, are pockmarked with numerous plutonic intrusions, 160 most of which have an exposed area <100 km2, and therefore further categorized as Witkosky 8 161 stocks. Middle to Late Jurassic igneous activity is responsible for many of the plutons, 162 which along with relationships to regional deformation, are believed to have formed in 163 an arc system above an east-dipping subduction zone (Wright and Fahan, 1988). 164 This study focuses on the northwestern contact between the Central 165 Metamorphic Belt (or Central Metamorphic terrane) and the Canyon Creek Pluton in the 166 Trinity Alps Wilderness area, located approximately 60 miles northeast of Eureka and 167 45 miles northwest of Redding in northern California (please see Figures 2A and 2B). 168 The Central Metamorphic terrane is interpreted to have formed by subduction of 169 oceanic lithosphere along the Bully Choop thrust fault (Irwin and Wooden, 1999), and 170 may correlate with the Feather River terrane of the Sierra Nevada (Hacker and 171 Peacock, 1990). The Canyon Creek Pluton is part of a larger set of plutons that Allen 172 and Barnes believe were derived by partial melting of its metabasic host rock, the 173 Central Metamorphic terrane (2006). Glaciation during the Wisconsin period (roughly 174 110-10 Ka) has exposed bedrock in the Grizzly Creek stream valley (Sharp, 1960), 175 providing for excellent exposure of the plutonic contact in question. 176 The majority of plutonic rocks in the Klamath Mountains are Mesozoic in age, 177 ranging from approximately 174-136 Ma (Allen and Barnes 2006). The Canyon Creek 178 Pluton is included in a suite of 5 plutons that are collectively referred to as the Post- 179 western Klamath tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (ttg) suite, with early Cretaceous 180 ages ranging from approximately 142-136 Ma (Allen and Barnes, 2006). These ttg 181 plutons, located in the Trinity Alps Wilderness, are of interest because they represent 182 the second youngest plutonic episode in the Klamath Mountains (post accretionary 183 plutonism according to Irwin and Wooden, 1999), yet are located further east than older Witkosky 9 184 metamorphic terranes with separate groups of older (Late Jurassic) plutons. 185 Furthermore, inconsistent older ages have been reported for the Canyon Creek pluton 186 (“z 160 – 170” in Figure 2, from Wright and Fahan, 1988), an aspect that will be 187 discussed in a later section of this paper. 188 ROCK UNITS 189 Host Rock: Salmon Hornblende Schist of the Central Metamorphic Belt 190 Davis et al. originally divided rocks that make up the Central Metamorphic Belt in 191 the Klamath Mountains Province into the Grouse Ridge Formation and the Salmon 192 Hornblende Schist (1965). In my study area, the host rock for the Canyon Creek Pluton 193 is the Salmon Hornblende Schist. In hand sample, the Salmon Hornblende Schist is 194 melanocratic, mafic, fine-grained (<1 mm) to cryptocrystalline, with a well-developed 195 foliation and subtle lineation from the amphibole needles present. The foliation creates a 196 slaty cleavage, with millimeter to centimeter thick felsic ribbons of plagioclase and 197 quartz exploiting foliation planes. The felsic ribbons are also frequently isoclinally folded 198 and boudinaged (please see Figure 3). 199 In thin section, hornblende grains are predominantly hypidioblastic, exhibiting a 200 dimensional preferred orientation and lattice preferred orientation with c-axes lying in 201 the foliation plane. Quart grains exhibit undulose extinction, with sizes averaging 202 approximately 0.1 mm. Hornblende makes up about 60% of the modal percentage, with 203 plagioclase at 30%, quartz at 5% and opaque magnetite at 5% of the total (this and any 204 other subsequent modal percentages noted were calculated using the percentage 205 diagrams for estimating composition by volume in Appendix 3 of Compton, 1985). The Witkosky 10 206 plagioclase composition is An60, or labradorite (this and any other subsequent 207 plagioclase compositions noted were determined using the Michel Levy method). 208 According to Barnes et al. (1992), a tholeiitic igneous protolith was thrust beneath 209 the eastern Klamath Belt in Devonian time to initiate lower amphibolite facies 210 metamorphism in what is now the Central metamorphic Belt. Hacker and Peacock 211 (1990) agree with the Devonian age for the Central Metamorphic Belt, adding that the 212 protolith was mafic oceanic lithosphere, deformed under temperature-pressure 213 conditions ranging from 500° to 650 ± 50°C, and 500 ± 300 MPa, respectively, in an arc 214 basement/subduction zone couple (values are based on observed mineral 215 assemblages, mineral chemistry, and limited thermometry). These metamorphic 216 conditions, along with mineral assemblages and chemistry, guided the aforementioned 217 correlation between the Central Metamorphic Belt and the Feather River terrane of the 218 Sierra Nevada, which is also Early to Middle Paleozoic in age. Irwin and Wooden 219 (1999), also report ages for the Central Metamorphic Belt (although they refer to it as 220 the Central Metamorphic terrane) ranging from >400-380 Ma, Late Silurian to Middle 221 Devonian (older ages are from K-Ar methods on hornblende, younger ages from Rb/Sr 222 methods on whole rock). 223 Davis et al. (1965) and Cox (1967) reported Late Paleozoic ages (286-270 Ma, 224 Early to Middle Permian) for regional metamorphism of the Salmon Hornblende Schist 225 from K-Ar methods on hornblende (these ages were reported in Cox’s 1967 manuscript 226 as Pennsylvanian or pre-Permian, likely from an outmoded Geologic Time Scale used 227 at the time). Another conflicting age for this unit comes from Barrow and Metcalfe 228 (2006), who give two new Early Permian ages of 274 ± 2 Ma for Central Metamorphic Witkosky 11 229 terrane amphibolite near the Trinity Thrust Fault. These ages agree with Davis et al. 230 (1965) and Cox (1967), and are much younger than the Devonian ages reported by 231 others, but Barrow and Metcalfe have an interpretation that reconciles the conflicting 232 ages. Barrow and Metcalfe believe that these ages represent Early Permian uplift and 233 cooling during a proposed supra-subduction extensional episode that reactivated the 234 Devonian subduction margin (Trinity Thrust fault). With this thermal event yielding 235 younger ages for the Salmon Hornblende Schist, reactivation of the Trinity thrust fault 236 as an extensional structure responding to upper plate extension in a Late Paleozoic 237 subduction zone is a viable interpretation, and coincides with the notion of so-called 238 “accordion tectonics,” where the predominate tectonic style in the Klamath Mountains 239 has cycled between subduction (compression) and rift (extension) zones throughout the 240 province’s genesis (D. Yule, personal communication, 2013). Wright and Fahan also 241 mention cyclic tectonic periods in the orogenic history of the Klamath Mountains to 242 explain the presence of various ophiolite terranes formed during extension in an 243 otherwise compressive regime (1988). Thus, the maximum Devonian age was taken for 244 the Salmon Hornblende Schist when compiling the geologic map of the study area in 245 Plate 1. 246 The Canyon Creek Pluton 247 In my study area, the Canyon Creek pluton is composed of leucocratic, felsic, 248 hypidiomorphic, medium-grained hornblende biotite tonalite. In hand sample, the 249 tonalite is phaneritic, with 1-3 mm grains of hornblende, biotite, quartz, and plagioclase 250 (listed in order of increasing modal abundance). Under thin section, some plagioclase 251 grains show seritization, and others contain hornblende inclusions. Plagioclase Witkosky 12 252 composition is An39, or andesine, and accessory minerals present are apatite and 253 zircon. A population of zircon has been separated and mounted for U-Pb radiometric 254 age analysis on tonalitic rocks in my study area for the Canyon Creek Pluton. 255 The Canyon Creek Pluton is included in an intrusive suite of ttg plutons that are 256 believed to have formed as a result of arc magmatism above an east dipping subduction 257 zone in the Middle to Late Jurassic (Wright and Fahan, 1988). This interpretation on 258 magma genesis in the area is based on synchronous regional metamorphism and thrust 259 faulting, and discredits the idea that the Klamath Mountain metamorphic terranes are 260 allocthonous fragments that have traveled far before colliding with and being sutured 261 onto the western boundary of the North American continental plate. Davis et al., 262 however, pointed out that the thrust faults do not represent paleo-tectonic plate 263 boundaries, and doubt that the actual subduction interface has been preserved (1980). 264 In 1988, Wright and Fahan published radiometric zircon ages for the Canyon 265 Creek Pluton that spanned over 30 million years. Two separate samples, collected from 266 a location approximately three miles from my study area (in a south 30° east direction) 267 yielded the following ages (in Ma, uncertainties are two-sigma): 206Pb/238U = 143.7 ± 268 0.4, 140.7 ± 0.4; 207Pb/235U = 144.9 ± 0.4, 141.7 ± 0.4; 207Pb/206Pb = 169 ± 9, 159 ± 269 8. Wright and Fahan attributed the discordant ages to either recent Pb-loss or possible 270 zircon inheritance, but regardless of the reason, these ages warranted further analysis. 271 In 1992, Barnes et al. suggested that the older ages calculated by Wright and 272 Fahan for the Canyon Creek Pluton resulted from inherited zircon, but they also further 273 expanded on their interpretations, adding that the rocks showed geochemical signatures 274 that were consistent with partial melting of low-K tholeiitic crust experiencing Witkosky 13 275 amphibolite grade metamorphism (i.e. the host rock, or Salmon Hornblende Schist). It 276 wasn’t until 2006 that Allen and Barnes did another geochronologic study on plutons in 277 the area that had previously yielded problematic age data. Samples from the Canyon 278 Creek Pluton gave radiometric zircon ages of 140.0 ± 1.3 Ma, with an uncertainty of 279 one-sigma (Allen and Barnes, 2006. Take careful note: this age is from their own study, 280 with the data found in Table 2 of the article. Table 1 also has age data for the Canyon 281 Creek pluton, but the numerics are not identical to data in Table 2, because the data in 282 Table 1 is referenced from several other papers). The 2006 study by Allen and Barnes 283 refined the previous ages by Wright and Fahan (1988), and showed that the previous 284 discordance could be a result of inheritance. 285 Dikes 286 An abundance of dikes were identified and mapped in the study area. The dikes 287 fell into one of 3 main compositions: andesite hornblende porphyry, dacite plagioclase 288 porphyry, and greenstone (listed in order of decreasing abundance; please see Plate 1). 289 There are also dikes that are gradational between 2 end members of the 3 main 290 classes. These dikes make up approximately 6% of the surface area expression of the 291 Canyon creek Pluton. The percentage of surface area calculated can be used as a 292 proxy for the volume percentage of the pluton made up by dikes because the 293 orientations of the dikes were measured as predominantly sub-vertical, meaning that 294 the true thickness of the dikes are projected onto the surface expression. The 295 contribution of the dikes to the structural emplacement of the Canyon Creek Pluton will 296 be discussed in a later section. 297 Witkosky 14 298 299 Andesite Hornblende Porphyry The most abundant composition for dikes located in the study area is a dark grey 300 porphyry of ~3 mm needle-shaped hornblende phenocrysts set in a fine-grained matrix 301 of quartz, plagioclase, and hornblende (please see Figure 4). The hornblende needles 302 are oriented in a random, felted manner, and the rock is strongly magnetic. The strong 303 magnetism is attributed to 7% of the modal percentage being opaque magnetite in thin 304 section. Other textures seen in thin section include skeletal hornblende with plagioclase 305 growing in the voids, and microscopic views show that some of the larger hornblende 306 phenocrysts are actually aggregates of many smaller anhedral grains. Plagioclase 307 makes up about 60% of the modal percentage, with a composition of An58, or 308 labradorite (from this measurement, a mafic origin is interpreted for this dike set). 309 The porphyritic texture for these dikes leads to an interpretation of hypabyssal 310 emplacement depths at roughly 5 km. Hornblende phenocrysts initially formed in a slow- 311 cooling magma chamber, followed by injection into fracture systems of a growing pluton, 312 where increased cooling rates created the finer-grained matrix of interstitial plagioclase. 313 Zircon populations from this dike set have been separated and mounted, and currently 314 await radiometric U-Pb dating analysis to determine emplacement age. 315 Dacite Plagioclase Porphyry 316 Although not the most abundant, the dacite plagioclase porphyry dikes are the 317 largest found in the study area, some measuring up to 25 m in thickness (please see 318 Plate 1). As previously stated, this measurement taken from the surface projection is 319 very close to the true thickness because of the dike’s sub-vertical orientation. Rocks in 320 these dikes are light gray, felsic, with 3-5 mm plagioclase and quartz phenocrysts in a Witkosky 15 321 fine-grained matrix of quartz, plagioclase, and hornblende needles up to 1 mm. There 322 are rare 5mm hornblende and biotite grains, and some of the plagioclase is weathered 323 and altered to clay minerals. In thin section some phenocrysts are sieved and embayed, 324 with seritization of plagioclase, hornblende with actinolite rims, and secondary chlorite 325 and epidote. Plagioclase composition is An46, or andesine. 326 The genesis of the dacite plagioclase porphyry dikes closely resembles that of 327 the andesite hornblende porphyry set, with initial slow cooling followed by rapid 328 hypabyssal emplacement (i.e. porphyritic texture). The dacitic dikes are speculated to 329 have been emplaced after the andesitic set, though, from an evolved, more siliceous 330 melt. Likewise, zircon grains have been separated and mounted from the dacitic dikes, 331 and a future radiometric age analysis can confirm the speculated chronology of 332 emplacement. It is worth noting that zircons from the dacitic dikes have the largest grain 333 sizes out of any population separated from rock samples in the study area. It is also 334 worth noting that a similar dacite porphyry dike set was noted by Davis (1963) in the 335 northwestern part of the Caribou Mountain Pluton, which is a tonalitic intrusion located 336 immediately to the northeast of the Canyon Creek Pluton (at a distance of roughly 2 337 km), leading to the notion that these dacite porphyry dike sets in separate plutons may 338 be correlative. The Caribou Mountain Pluton is in the same Post-western Klamath 339 tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite suite as the Canyon Creek Pluton (Allen and Barnes, 340 2006), and has yielded U-Pb radiometric zircon ages of 139.2 ± 1.9 Ma, which is 341 synchronous within error to the 140.0 ± 1.3 Ma age calculated for the Canyon Creek 342 Pluton. 343 Witkosky 16 344 345 Greenstone The greenstone dikes record varying degrees of hydrothermal alteration to other 346 dike sets in the study area, and are therefore further subdivided into 2 categories. The 347 first type (type 1) is dark green, medium-grained (1-2 mm), mafic rock with amphibole 348 needles and pistachio green epidote crystals in a random, felted texture. Subtle cm- 349 scale bands are present with amphibole needles in a white, aphanitic groundmass 350 (please see Figure 5). There are open vesicles (roughly 1 mm in diameter), and rare 5 351 mm subhedral quartz megacrysts. In thin section, this first type of greenstone dike is 352 predominantly made up of hornblende, bladed actinolite, epidote, and chlorite. Radiating 353 masses of tremolite and pumpellyite (or possibly piemontite) are seen in the cm-scale 354 white bands. Amphiboles are heavily sieved with quartz and feldspar intergrowth, and 355 dark reddish-brown anhedral opaque minerals are in the process of breaking down to 356 oxides. 357 The second type of greenstone dike (type 2) is porphyry consisting of 2-3 mm 358 blocky and needle-shaped skeletal remains set in a light bluish-green aphanitic 359 groundmass (please see Figure 6A and 6B). The phenocrysts are so completely 360 obliterated that the occupancy sites can be mistaken for vesicles (please see Figure 7). 361 Under thin section, some of the skeletal phenocrysts can be identified as subhedral 362 amphibole in various stages of complete alteration to mica. The groundmass seems to 363 be composed mainly of chlorite and sericite, but this is difficult verify with the 364 cryptocrystalline nature of the grains. 365 Both the first and second types of greenstone dikes are interpreted to be 366 hydrothermally altered products of the andesite hornblende porphyry, with the second Witkosky 17 367 type being a more advanced stage of alteration. The abundance of hydrous mineral 368 phases in these greenstone dikes can be attributed to the effects of steam and fluid 369 intrusion during emplacement. A hydrous injection episode coupled with magmatic 370 emplacement seems to follow emplacement of the other dike sets chronologically, as a 371 very small number of the dikes show alteration, and dikes that do show alteration have 372 phase assemblages that appear to be derivatives of other dike sets in the study area 373 (making other dike sets protoliths). The 2 types of greenstone dikes are also generally 374 found together in close proximity in the southern portion of the study area (please see 375 Plate 1). Unfortunately, attempts at zircon separation did not yield a population for 376 radiometric age analysis on the greenstone dike set. 377 STRUCTURE 378 In this section, two main aspects will be discussed regarding the structural 379 emplacement of the Canyon Creek Pluton. First, a section is devoted to describing the 380 contact between the pluton and its host rock, with emphasis on detailed transects 381 documented along the contact zone. Observations from the interactions between the 382 pluton and host rock are then used to make an interpretation on depth of emplacement. 383 A second section then covers observations made within the body of the pluton, mainly 384 concerning the abundance of dikes present and their potential contribution to 385 emplacement with the notion of a several million year incremental building hypothesis. 386 For both sections, continuous reference will be made to Plates 1 and 2, the geologic 387 map of the study area and the central transect, respectively. 388 Witkosky 18 389 390 Contact Transects and Depth of Emplacement While making a geologic map of the contact zone, approximately 13% of the 391 contact between the Canyon Creek Pluton and its host rocks were mapped in detail, 392 with three separate transects made along the contact zone (the locations of the 393 transects can be seen in Plate 1). For the purpose of compiling this manuscript, only the 394 central transect was digitized and included, because the other two did not show any 395 new or otherwise different features than that of the central one. 396 The central transect was performed on a west facing wall of the Grizzly Meadows 397 stream valley (please see Figure 8A and 8B), where the bedrock is well-exposed and 398 not highly weathered, providing for a well-preserved historical view of the interactions 399 that took place between the pluton and its host rock during emplacement. The central 400 transect began in the Canyon Creek Pluton and proceeded north, ending in the Salmon 401 Hornblende Schist. A first order observation made is that the contact is not a discrete, 402 sharp boundary as predicted by the paradigm, but actually a broad, diffuse zone, 50 m 403 wide, that documents a sequence of fracturing and diking as the plutonic magma 404 intruded into the host rock (other transects recorded a contact zone up to 100 m wide). 405 One of the first features noted at the 5 m mark is the abundance of centimeter to 406 decimeter scale angular fragments of host rock that have been broken off and 407 incorporated as enclaves or xenoliths into the pluton (please see Figure T1 in Plate 2). 408 Another feature that seems to refute the paradigm is that the contact obliquely cuts 409 foliation in the Salmon Hornblende Schist, showing that the structural fabric in the host 410 rock is not pervasively parallel to the contact margin (please see Figure T2 in Plate 2). 411 This oblique feature was also noted by Davis et al. (1965), where in outcrop or map Witkosky 19 412 scale it appears that pluton contacts are parallel to host rock foliation, but a closer view 413 reveals that the contacts cut the foliation at low angles. At 10-20 m into the transect, 414 many dikes and veins intrude into what is soon recognized to be a mega-enclave of 415 host rock. This mega enclave measures at least 30 m in diameter. Cox (1967) also 416 noted that along the western contact zone of the Canyon Creek Pluton (or Canyon 417 Creek stock, as referenced in his paper), the tonalite solidified in the process of stoping 418 large angular fragments of amphibolite. Strike and dip measurements of foliation in the 419 mega enclave, however, are parallel to those measured in host rock that makes up the 420 actual wall of the contact. This shows that the mega-enclave is not a stoped block, but a 421 large chunk of wall rock that was never granted the allowance to move and rotate freely 422 in a large, liquid magma body. The mega-enclave maintained its original orientation 423 during plutonic intrusion, owing its current isolated appearance to a series of small dike 424 injections occurring around it. Belcher and Kisters (2006) and Glazner et al. (2004) also 425 noted non-rotational wall rock translation in their interpretations on incremental plutonic 426 construction. As one moves northward in the transect, this multiple episode, smaller 427 scale diking is documented, with centimeter scale aplitic veins exploiting weak foliation 428 planes in the host rock (please see Figure T3 in Plate 2). Finally, the last instance of 429 plutonic rock is seen intruding into the host as a large tonalite apophysis (please see 430 Figure T4 in Plate 2). From distal views, this apophysis (large feeder dike) is seen to 431 have channeled magma into other large dikes that run parallel along the contact margin 432 (Figures 8A and 8B). 433 434 Upon return to California State University Northridge, thin sections of oriented samples from the contact zone were made perpendicular and parallel to the trend of the Witkosky 20 435 contact. This was done not only to study the petrography of the rock units, but also in 436 order to verify whether any alignment of mineral grains can be seen at the microscopic 437 level. Again, following the paradigm, an alignment of mineral grains parallel to the 438 contact margin should be present, produced by a forceful emplacement episode. After a 439 careful and extensive field analysis, I concluded that there is no obvious alignment of 440 mineral grains in hand samples collected from the pluton while performing the central 441 transect, and as previously mentioned, foliation in the host rock is not pervasively 442 parallel to the contact. Likewise, even when viewed on CSUN’s scanning electron 443 microscope, plutonic rocks from the contact zone show a random grain orientation 444 (please see Figure T6 in Plate 2). This lack of order in mineral grains is contrary to the 445 predictions of the paradigm, and seems to refute the notion of hot, buoyant, balloon-like, 446 forceful plutonic emplacement. Furthermore, there is no contact aureole present in or 447 near the contact zone, which leads to the following interpretation: emplacement of the 448 Canyon Creek Pluton occurred at a depth of 5-10 km, where cold, brittle behavior 449 dominates the probable style of rock deformation. 450 With no contact metamorphism present, the interpretation on shallow 451 emplacement depth is also supported by a graph showing relationships between 452 temperature, pressure, depth, and what metamorphic facies are found in different 453 combinations of these variables (Figure 9). In this graph, amphibolite grade 454 metamorphism begins to occur with temperature and pressure conditions present at a 455 depth of approximately 8-10 km. Thus, I make the argument that this puts a maximum 456 emplacement depth on the Canyon Creek Pluton, based on the youngest age for its 457 amphibolite grade host rock, the Salmon Hornblende Schist of the Central Metamorphic Witkosky 21 458 Belt. If emplacement had occurred at a depth greater than 10 km, metamorphic 459 recrystallization would also have been taking place in the host rock during plutonic 460 intrusion, which means that crystallization ages for the amphibolite grade host rock 461 should be at maximum synchronous with the Early Cretaceous ages for crystallization of 462 the Canyon Creek Pluton. At depths greater than 10 km, the blocking temperature for K- 463 Ar dating method in hornblende (approximately 500° C) is not likely to be achieved, 464 which means that the radiometric clock could not have began ticking until the host rock 465 was at a depth that allowed for lower temperatures and further solidification of 466 hornblende crystals. Furthermore, heat conduction involved in a large molten body 467 coming into contact with the host rock would only further delay cooling, which again 468 supports the idea of a cold, brittle, and overall passive emplacement episode. 469 Dike Emplacement and the Incremental Building Hypothesis 470 In my study area, a large number of dikes are located in the main body of the 471 Canyon Creek Pluton (please see Figure 10 for one instance). While mapping, I 472 recorded the thickness and orientations of these dikes, in order to answer the following 473 questions: 1. Do the dikes make up a significant volume percentage of the pluton?; and 474 2. Do the trends of the dikes record a stress/strain regime that was present during 475 emplacement? Question 1 directly tests the incremental building hypothesis by showing 476 that it is possible to view the Canyon Creek Pluton as an amalgamation of many small 477 magma chambers, in this case, dikes (as suggested in Glazner et al., 2004). Question 2 478 aims to build on Question 1, by statistically analyzing structural data tallied on the 479 internal makeup of the pluton, and how tectonic forces may allow for geologically slow 480 (>1 million years) assimilation of large magma bodies into the Earth’s crust. Witkosky 22 481 The thicknesses of the dikes mapped are shown in Plate 1. By first calculating 482 the surface area dominated by dike swarms around Grizzly Lake, and then calculating 483 the amount of surface area composed of dike exposures, the percentage of surface 484 area composed of dike exposures is approximately 6%. This is taken as a good proxy 485 for volume percentage because the dikes are for the most part oriented sub-vertically 486 (dike orientations can be viewed in the stereonet of Figure 14, but this figure will be 487 discussed in more detail soon). Postulation continues regarding the ages of the dike 488 swarms, as a zircon analysis that yields dates synchronous with or soon after 489 crystallization of the main plutonic body would help to corroborate the incremental 490 building hypothesis, barring any arguments over inheritance issues. Some final pieces 491 of physical evidence can be seen in Figures 11A and 11B, where it appears that at least 492 a portion of the plutonic and dike magmas may have concurrently been molten during 493 emplacement. Figure 11A shows dark, dike magma thoroughly mixing and mingling with 494 lighter-colored tonalitic magma, and in Figure 11B, it appears that a piece of hot, 495 Canyon Creek Pluton tonalitic magma was smeared up against a pre-existing dike, after 496 incorporating many small inclusions of the dike material into its matrix. These images 497 provide evidence for a hot, unsolidified pluton during dike development, which supports 498 the interpretation of synchronous emplacement. 499 Evidence supporting the interpretation of a shallow emplacement in cold, brittle 500 crust has already been presented by a detailed transects along the contact zone, and 501 this interpretation is now extended to include the tectonic stress/strain regime present 502 during the time of emplacement. To consider the possibility of synchronous diking 503 during pluton emplacement, I draw from a stress analysis presented with the stereonet Witkosky 23 504 in Figure 14. Poles to planar surfaces of dikes, faults and fractures show very good 505 statistical grouping, allowing for a best-fit line to be placed in the center of the stereonet. 506 By also including shear sense indicators that mirror faulting documented in the study 507 area (mainly strike-slip, please see Figures 12 and 13), an analogy is made to a rock 508 cylinder crushing experiment, where the critical angle of failure is, on average, 509 approximately 30°, measured counter-clockwise from σ1, the direction of greatest 510 principal stress (or principal direction of shortening). The principal direction of 511 shortening thus represents the east-directed subduction recorded throughout most of 512 the history of Klamath Mountains metamorphic terrane accretion. Fracture sets that 513 follow the best-fit line on the stereonet of Figure 14 can be seen as a pervasive pattern 514 in the Canyon Creek Pluton tonalite of Figure 12. The chronology of emplacement is 515 then interpreted to follow a path beginning with tectonic compression, fracturing, 516 opening of the fracture sets, and subsequent filling with magma, creating the abundant 517 dike sets that have amalgamated to make up the totality of the plutonic structure. 518 Faulting also occurred during and post-emplacement, as evidenced by displacement of 519 select dikes (Plate 1). I draw these interpretations from discussion on pluton 520 emplacement through dike amalgamation in Glazner et al. (2004), and magma transport 521 mechanisms in Petford et al. (2000), which include magma ascent through narrow 522 conduits (dikes), and dilatational faulting, and also see the overall emplacement process 523 as episodic, with discrete pulses that result in field evidence showing the inner plutonic 524 structure as a composition of internal sheets, varying in thickness from decimeter to 525 kilometer scale. Witkosky 24 526 A final issue to address is the previous interpretation on emplacement style for 527 the Canyon Creek Pluton presented in Davis et al. (any reference made to Davis et al. 528 in this paragraph concerns the 1965 paper). In their study, the predominant 529 emplacement style was interpreted as forceful shouldering aside of the host rock, and 530 they based this interpretation on the domical presentation of the pluton in map view 531 (please see Figure 15). The domical presentation can be attributed to a pervasive 532 foliation measured throughout the body of the pluton, and appears to resemble a bird’s 533 eye view of the model for the paradigm seen in Figure 1 of this paper. Davis et al. also 534 note that the pluton appears to have been intruded as a single mass, and interpreted its 535 geometric form from measurements made on planar foliation and other various 536 structural alignments located well inside the body of the intrusion that run parallel to the 537 contact. No foliation is present in the body of the pluton in my study area, which is 538 consistent with the map produced by Davis et al. (Figure 15). It is possible that the 539 fracturing in my study area represents cleavage along foliation planes that correlate with 540 those mapped by Davis et al., but they did report seeing joint sets and andesitic dikes 541 trending northeast in the body of the pluton. With respect to the stress analysis already 542 presented regarding dike emplacement, I expand on the idea of incremental 543 construction under a specific tectonic regime by noting that sequential dike injections 544 would have plenty of time to cool and solidify in a long-lived, several-million-year 545 emplacement process, meaning that at any given time during emplacement, a large 546 portion of the pluton would be solid. This follows my previous interpretations on shallow 547 emplacement in the cold, brittle realm, with fracturing as a main mechanism that guides 548 magmatic injections. It is possible that the foliation documented by Davis et al. could Witkosky 25 549 have been formed in a solid state, similar to that mentioned by another interpretation on 550 incremental pluton emplacement (Belcher and Kisters, 2006; although a batholith scale 551 pluton in their case). The foliation documented by Davis et al. can then be explained by 552 drawing a finite strain ellipsoid on their map of the Canyon creek Pluton, where foliation 553 planes, along with fold axes mapped, are perpendicular to the principal direction of 554 shortening, which is again an artifact of the east dipping subduction zone that ultimately 555 generated the conditions required for magma generation. The dikes in the Canyon 556 Creek Pluton represent incremental sheeted intrusions of this magma source into 557 existing fracture planes. Sheeted intrusions are also a style of incremental injections 558 interpreted by Belcher and Kisters (2006). 559 An alternative interpretation for the field data presented in this paper is that the 560 portion of the Canyon Creek Pluton in my study area may represent a discrete lobe of 561 magmatic generation, detached from emplacement of the main body in the intrusive 562 mass. A detailed study using zircon geochronology on the Tuolumne intrusion of the 563 Sierra Nevada range in California showed that such magmatic lobes provide snapshots 564 of pluton growth (Memeti et al, 2010), and is still consistent with the idea of incremental 565 stage pluton construction, albeit not through the dike sheeting mechanism as proposed 566 by Glazner et al. (2004). Again, a geochronologic analysis on zircon separated from the 567 aforementioned tonalite samples from my study area would help guide interpretations, 568 and possibly verify that the lack of foliation in my study area is a result of a discrete, 569 shorter-lived magmatic pulse, independent in genesis from that of the main body of the 570 pluton. 571 Witkosky 26 572 573 DISCUSSION AND IMPLICATIONS A discussion on historical geology is now in order, due to the repetitious hints at 574 a pending U-Pb radiometric age analysis on zircon separated from plutonic and dike 575 rocks collected in the study area. The main concern is to emphasize the importance in 576 methodology described by Memeti et al. (2012), regarding single zircon grain age 577 analyses. If radiometric dating is performed on rocks from my study area, I will classify 578 zircon grains into one of three categories: xenocrysts, antecrysts, and autocrysts. 579 Following Memeti et al. (2012), xenocrysts are inherited from the host rock, antecrysts 580 are recycled from older parts of a pluton, and autocrysts give the true representative 581 ages, as they are the grains that actually grew during crystallization of the sample being 582 dated. The discordant ages for the Canyon Creek Pluton calculated by Wright and 583 Fahan (1988) pay tribute to the loss of precision in performing multiple grain analyses, 584 as xenocrystic cores likely gave erroneous results in their ages (that spanned 30 million 585 years) for the Canyon Creek Pluton. With a highly controversial interpretation such as 586 the incremental building hypothesis presented in my results, great care must be taken to 587 rule out the possibility of inheritance or recycling in any dike ages calculated, as there is 588 a large possibility that zircons separated from dike rocks could be xenocrysts or 589 antecrysts from an older mass of the plutonic tonalite. 590 With respect to economic geology, and as noted by Ernst et al. (2008), calc- 591 alkaline activity in the Jurassic Klamath Mountain province produced numerous plutonic 592 intrusions that, coupled with subduction zone dewatering, allowed for the rise of metallic 593 aqueous solutions into fracture zones, forming ore bodies in the Earth’s crust (Fig. 9 in 594 their manuscript shows a striking geographic correlation in northern California between Witkosky 27 595 various gold mines and Mesozoic and Paleozoic plutonic and metamorphic rocks). 596 Likewise, gold bearing quartz veins have been mined in the Salmon Hornblende Schist 597 (Cox 1967), and according to Begnoche (2002), mining of precious metals such as 598 copper, zinc, gold, and silver played an important role in the development of the early 599 northern Californian economy (in the late 1800’s to early 1900’s). To this end, I present 600 a new model for pluton emplacement, based on field evidence in this study and the 601 contemporary ideas regarding the incremental building hypothesis for pluton 602 emplacement, where plutons form over a several million year time span and are not 603 believed to ever exist as a large, singular magma body (please see Figure 16). If 604 incremental, or multiple stage construction is found to be viable, this could have 605 important implications for metallic resource exploration. Fluids that are heated deep in 606 the crust rise and travel along fractured or unconformable surfaces as they attempt to 607 de-gas and escape into the atmosphere. Metallic minerals often precipitate in these 608 weak zones as vapors exploit a path of least resistance. If the paradigm (Figure 1) is 609 correct, then there is only one major surface that could potentially harbor mineralization: 610 the main contact between a pluton and its host rock. If many dikes are injected over 611 time, however, to form an integrated body, then every molten injection serves as a 612 branch-like finger of available path, thus drastically increasing the total amount of 613 surface area available for the growth of minerals that are economically important. My 614 new model is referred to as a “dendritic style” of pluton emplacement, because the 615 network of dikes grows slowly upward like a group of tree branches (Figure 16). Finally, 616 the dendritic style of pluton emplacement could also be a potential solution to the room 617 or space problem, because large volumetric displacement in the solid, dense Witkosky 28 618 subsurface realm can be resolved by considering smaller incremental injections over a 619 longer time period. 620 CONCLUSIONS 621 Field mapping and subsequent calculations show that the Canyon Creek Pluton 622 is composed of dike rocks that make up nearly 6% of its total volume in the study area. 623 Some of the dikes also show evidence for mixing and mingling with tonalitic magma, 624 meaning that both rock units may have been molten at the same time, and diking could 625 have been a significant mechanism that aided in the process of plutonic emplacement. 626 The transects along the contact margin record a long history of brittle rock deformation, 627 with abundant fractures and yet even more dikes in a diffuse zone at least 50 meters 628 wide. There is no evidence for alignment of mineral grains (in either the pluton or host 629 rock) parallel to the contact zone, which detracts from the implications of the paradigm. 630 Through field evidence and stress/strain analyses, it has been shown how the 631 Canyon Creek Pluton could have been emplaced in incremental sheeted dike injections 632 over a very long time period. Tectonic forces helped to make space for magma 633 emplacement through compression, fracturing, faulting, and subsequent dilatational 634 filling. This style of brittle deformation indicates a shallow emplacement depth of 5-10 635 km, at epizonal to mesozonal depths. The wide, diffuse contact margins between pluton 636 and host rock show no signs of preferred grain orientation, and seem to refute the idea 637 of a hot, dome-like, forceful emplacement episode. Observations made while compiling 638 the transects point toward more passive interactions between the magma and host rock 639 during emplacement. Still, as some of the original workers, Arthur Snoke and Cal 640 Barnes, on geology of the Klamath Mountains suggest, zircon inheritance and Witkosky 29 641 assimilation may present problems in future studies (2006). Therefore, the only 642 remaining unresolved issue is calculating precise ages for pluton and dike rocks from 643 the study area to constrain the timeline of emplacement, which might help corroborate 644 the several-million-year incremental building hypothesis. 645 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 646 During my time as an undergraduate at CSUN, I have truly received help from 647 every single one of my friends, faculty, and faculty who have become my friends in the 648 Department of Geological Sciences. Thus, narrowing down the list is tough, but here is 649 my best shot at expressing my gratitude to those who contributed to this thesis: Jose 650 Cardona and Joshua Graham for assisting in field work while camping in the study area; 651 Mrs. Marylin Hanna for providing the financial means necessary to embark on such an 652 amazing geological journey; Dr. Dick Heermance for coercing me into coming along on 653 graduate research, and his belief in my ability to execute my own project; Dr. Elena 654 Miranda for assisting in SEM work; Christine Rains for providing endless support in 655 discussion and editorials on this and other manuscripts; Dr. Joshua Schwartz for 656 assisting in petrography and zircon separation/radiometric age analyses; and last only 657 because this list is in alphabetical order, Dr. J. Doug Yule for inspiring my interest in 658 field mapping, introducing me to the geology of the Klamath Mountains, and how the 659 area can be used as an excellent natural laboratory for solving geologic problems. 660 Actually, I take that back, the final thank you would have to go to my mother, Anita 661 Weiss, who persuaded me to search for a brighter future by returning to college late in 662 life. 663 Witkosky 30 664 REFERENCES CITED 665 Allen, C. M., and Barnes, C. G., 2006, Ages and some cryptic sources of Mesozoic 666 plutonic rocks in the Klamath Mountains, California and Oregon, in Snoke, A. W., 667 and Barnes, C. G., eds., Geological studies in the Klamath Mountains province, 668 California and Oregon: A volume in honor of William P. Irwin: Boulder, Colorado, 669 Geological Society of America Special Paper 410, p. 223-245. 670 Allmendinger, R. W., 2011-2012, Stereonet 8: A program for plotting and analyzing 671 structural field data that can be found and downloaded for free at: 672 http://www.geo.cornell.edu/geology/faculty/RWA/programs/stereonet-7-for- 673 windows/. Please also see the following listing for more reference information on 674 this amazing program. 675 Allmendinger, R. W., Cardozo, N., and Fisher, D., in press, Structural geology 676 algorithms: Vectors and tensors in structural geology: Cambridge University 677 Press (book to be published in early 2012). 678 Barnes, C. G., Petersen, S. W., Kistler, R. W., Prestvik, T., Sundvoll, B., 1992, Tectonic 679 implications of isotopic variation among Jurassic and Early Cretaceous plutons, 680 Klamath Mountains: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 104, no. 1, 681 p.117-126, doi: 10.1130/0016-7606(1992)104<0117:TIOIVA>2.3.CO,2. 682 Barrow, W. M., and Metcalfe, R. V., 2006, A reevaluation of the paleotectonic 683 significance of the Paleozoic Central Metamorphic terrane, eastern Klamath 684 Mountains, California: New constraints from trace element geochemistry and 685 40 686 Geological studies in the Klamath Mountains province, California and Oregon: A Ar/39Ar thermochronology, in in Snoke, A. W., and Barnes, C. G., eds., Witkosky 31 687 volume in honor of William P. Irwin: Boulder, Colorado, Geological Society of 688 America Special Paper 410, p. 393-410. 689 Belcher, R. W., and Kisters, A. F. M., 2006, Progressive adjustments of ascent and 690 emplacement controls during incremental construction of the 3.1 Ga Heerenveen 691 batholith, South Africa: Journal of Structural Geology, v. 28, p. 1406-1421, 692 doi: 10.1016/j.jsg.2006.05.001. 693 694 695 Begnoche, D., 2002, Islands in Time: published by Don Begnoche, 178 p., http://books.google.com/books/about/Islands_in_Time.html?id=hAeeYgEACAAJ Burchardt, S., Tanner, D., and Krumbholz, M., 2012, The Slaufrudalur Pluton, southeast 696 Iceland—An example of shallow magma emplacement by cauldron subsidence 697 and magmatic stoping: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 124, no. 1-2, 698 p. 213-227, doi: 10.1130/B30430.1. 699 700 701 Compton, R. R., 1985, Geology in the Field: New York, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., 398 p. Cox, D. P., 1967, Reconnaissance geology of the Helena quadrangle, Trinity County, 702 California: California Division of Mines and Geology, SR 92, Short Contributions: 703 Cox, p. 43-55. 704 Davis, G. A., 1963, Structure and Mode of Emplacement of Caribou Mountain Pluton, 705 Klamath Mountains, California: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 74, 706 no. 3, p. 331-348, doi: 10.1130/0016-7606(1963)74[331:SAMOEO]2.0.CO;2. 707 Davis, G. A., Holdaway, M. J., Lipman, P. W., Romey, W. D., 1965, Structure, 708 Metamorphism, and Plutonism in the South-Central Klamath Mountains, 709 California: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 76, p. 933-966, 8 figs., 3 pls. Witkosky 32 710 Davis, G. A., Ando, C. J., Cashman, P. H., Goulladd, L., 1980, Geologic cross section of 711 the central Klamath Mountains, California: Summary: Geological Society of 712 America Bulletin, Part 1, v. 91, p. 139-142, 1 fig. 713 Detrick, R. S., Mutter, J. C., Buhl, P., and Kim, I. I.,1990, No evidence from multichannel 714 reflection data for a crustal magma chamber in the MARK area on the 715 Mid-Atlantic Ridge: Nature, v. 347, p. 61-64. 716 Ernst, W. G., Snow, C. A., Scherer, H. H., Mesozoic transpression, subduction and 717 metallogenesis in northern and central California: Terra Nova, v. 20, n. 5, 718 p. 394-413, doi: 10.1111/j.1365-3121.2008.00834.x. 719 Glazner, A. F., Bartley, J. M., Coleman, D. S., Gray, W., and Taylor, R. Z., 2004, Are 720 plutons assembled over millions of years by amalgamation from small magma 721 chambers?: GSA Today, v. 14, no. 4/5, doi: 10.1130/10525173(2004)014 722 <0004:APAOMO>2.0.CO;2. 723 724 725 Google Earth, 2013, “Grizzly Lake, CA.”: 41°00’26.28” N 123°03’08.02” W. April 18, 2013. Hacker, B. R., and Peacock, S. M., 1990, Comparison of the Central Metamorphic Belt 726 and Trinity terrane of the Klamath Mountains with the Feather River terrane of 727 the Sierra Nevada, in Harwood, D. S., and Miller, M. M., eds., Paleozoic and 728 early Mesozoic paleogeographic relations; Sierra Nevada, Klamath Mountains, 729 and related terranes: Boulder, Colorado, Geological Society of America Special 730 Paper 255, p. 75-92. 731 732 Irwin, W. P., and Wooden, J. L., 1999, Plutons and Accretionary Episodes of the Klamath Mountains, California and Oregon: U.S. Geological Survey Open—File Witkosky 33 733 Report 99—374, scale 1:950400, 734 http://geopubs.wr.usgs.gov/open-file/of99-374/of99-374.pdf, 735 accessed on April 5, 2012. 736 Memeti, V., Paterson, S., Matzel, J., Mundil, R., and Okaya, D., 2010, Magmatic lobes 737 as “snapshots” of magma chamber growth and evolution in large, composite 738 batholiths: An example from the Tuolumne intrusion, Sierra Nevada, California: 739 Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 122, no. 11/12, p. 1912-1931, doi: 740 10.1130/B30004.1, 12 figures. 741 Petford, N., Cruden, A. R., McCaffrey, K. J. W., and Vigneresse, J. -L., 2000, Granite 742 magma formation, transport and emplacement in the Earth’s crust: Nature, 743 v. 408, December, p. 669-673, www.nature.com. 744 745 746 Sharp, R. P.,1960, Pleistocene glaciation in Trinity Alps of Northern California: American Journal of Science, v. 258, May 1960, p.305-340. Snoke, A. W., and Barnes, C. G., 2006, The development of tectonic concepts for the 747 Klamath Mountains province, California and Oregon in Snoke, A. W., 748 and Barnes, C. G., eds., Geological studies in the Klamath Mountains province, 749 California and Oregon: A volume in honor of William P. Irwin: Boulder, Colorado, 750 Geological Society of America Special Paper 410, p. 1-29. 751 752 U. S. Geological Survey, 2012, Thompson Peak Quadrangle, California, 7.5-Minute Series: United States Geological Survey, scale 1:24 000, 1 sheet. 753 Wright, J. E., and Fahan, M. R., 1988, An expanded view of Jurassic orogenesis in the 754 western United States Cordillera: Middle Jurassic (pre-Nevadan) regional meta- 755 morphism and thrust faulting within an active arc environment, Klamath Witkosky 34 756 Mountains, California: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 100, p. 859-876, 757 11 figs., 6 tables Witkosky 35 Magma is generated in a large (kilometer scale), unified body... ~100,000 years later, mineral grains become aligned as the ductile, molten body swells upward... After ~500,000 years, the pluton is almost completely formed and solidified. Figure 1. The classic paradigm for pluton emplacement shows a profile view of magma rising as a diapir in the Earth’s crust (timeline for solidification taken from thermal modeling in Glazner et al., 2004). Also referred to as “forceful emplacement,” the arrows represent strong buoyancy and upwelling forces as the body intrudes into a dense, solidified crust. Deformation is not limited to crystals in the magma mush of the pluton, but also affects any structural fabric (i.e. metamorphic foliation or sedimentary layering) in the host rock. Witkosky 36 Figure 2A. Regional location of the study area: Grizzly Lake, Trinity National Forest, in Northern California (from Google Earth, 2013). The exact location is the small red bubble behind the letter “F” in “Forest”. For sense of scale, the study area is located approximately 60 miles northeast of Eureka and 45 miles northwest of Redding. Note that the study area is in the northwest portion of a distinct, light-gray-colored semicircular shape: this is the leucocratic igneous rock of the Canyon Creek Pluton, which can also be seen as a geologic unit in Figure 2B. Witkosky 37 Figure 2B. Zooming Sequence to the study area in the Klamath Mountains of northern California. The lightgray-colored rock mentioned in the previous figure (Figure 2A. Google Earth satellite image) is represented as a yellow-colored geologic unit in the centerpiece of this figure: the Canyon Creek Pluton (labeled “Canyon Cr”). “Z141 – 145” and “z 160 – 170” represent radiometric zircon ages (in millions of years) calculated for the Canyon Creek Pluton from Wright and Fahan, 1988 (figure modified from Irwin and Wooden, 1999). Witkosky 38 Figure 3. The Salmon Hornblende Schist is an amphibolite grade metamorphic rock with slaty cleavage and abundant isoclinally folded ribbons that consist of labradorite plagioclase and plastically deformed quartz (hammer and Brunton compass for scale). The Salmon Hornblende Schist is part of the Central Metamorphic Belt and plays host to the Canyon Creek Pluton in my study area. Witkosky 39 Figure 4. Close-up image of an andesite hornblende porphyry dike. Hornblende laths and needles (phenocrysts) are randomly oriented in a fine-grained matrix of mainly plagioclase microlites (pencil for scale). Witkosky 40 Figure 5. First type of greenstone dike (type 1), representing the first stage of hydrothermal alteration to other dike sets, and containing mostly actinolite, epidote, and chlorite. In the lower left hand portion a subtle, 1 cm thick white band of tremolite and punpellyite with reddish-brown oxides forming next to it (pencil for scale). Witkosky 41 Figure 6A. Half meter thick greenstone type 2 dike, showing light bluish-green color (hammer, pencil, and my foot for scale). Witkosky 42 Figure 6B. Zoomed in photo of Figure 6A, showing a relict porphyritic texture in type 2 greenstone dikes, with skeletal outlines of hornblende laths (hammer head and pencil for scale) set in an aphanitic matrix. Witkosky 43 Figure 7. Scanning electron microscope (SEM) image of a hornblende phenocryst that has been almost completely obliterated by hydrothermal alteration in a type 2 greenstone dike. Also note that a significant portion of the medium gray colored matrix is cryptocrystalline (massive). SEM working conditions are as follows: low vacuum wih 20.00 Pa H2O; accelerating voltage- 20.00 kV; spot size- 7.0; working distance10.999 mm; filament current- 2.18 A; beam current 94 µA; scale bar shown in lower left hand corner of image. Witkosky 44 Figure 8A. Annotated image showing the west-facing wall of the Grizzly Meadows stream valley, where the central transect (Plate 2) was performed. A portion of the transect outline is shown in pink at the bottom of the image. To the right, the light gray colored rock is that of the Canyon Creek Pluton, with the darker Salmon Hornblende Schist (host rock) to the left. The contact appears to be subvertical, where a large tonalite apophysis (labeled “Large Feeder Dike”) has channeled magma to several dikes that run parallel to the contact. Mount Shasta can also be seen in the background (photo credit to R. Heermance). Witkosky 45 Figure 8B. Approaching the location for the central transect on the morning of Thursday, August 9, 2012 (photo taken facing due east). In this image the complete central transect outline is shown in pink, again with the “Large Feeder Dike”, or tonalite apophysis (photo credit to R. Heermance). Witkosky 46 1600 1200 Eclogite 50 Blueschist Amphibolite Pressure (MPa) Granulite 30 Depth (km) 800 Greenschist 400 10 200 400 Temp (ºC) 600 800 TEMPERATURE-PRESSURE-DEPTH RELATIONSHIPS Figure 9. This graph copied from Begnoche (2002, p. 101, or p. 125 if viewed in PDF format) shows that a rock undergoing extensive amphibolite facies metamorphism must be at a depth of at least 10 km. With the amphibolite grade host rock (Salmon Hornblende Schist of the Central Metamorphic Belt) yielding Late Paleozoic metamorphic ages (at minimum), it is not likely that the host rock and its magmatic intrusion could have been at a depth greater than 10 km during emplacement of the Canyon Creek Pluton in the Early Cretaceous. The taupe-colored, shaded region shows the temperature-pressure conditions interpreted by Hacker and Peacock for the host rock (1990): 500° to 650 ± 50°C and 500 ± 300 MPa, respectively. These conditions are in general achieved at a depth much greater than 10 km. Witkosky 47 ~2 m Figure 10. 2 m thick, sub-vertical dike of andesite hornblende porphyry located within the main body of the Canyon Creek Pluton (photo taken facing roughly north 60° east). Some of the dikes in the study area have a measured thicknesses of 20 m or greater (thickness measured is very close to true thickness, not apparent thickness, due to the vertical orientation of most dikes mapped). (photo credit to R. Heermance). Witkosky 48 Figure 11A. An example of magma mixing between a dark, mafic dike, and lighter-colored tonalite. This mingling of magmas shows that the main body of the pluton was still very hot during dike development, meaning that both rock units were may have been simultaneously molten during emplacement (ruler for scale; photo credit to R. Heermance) Witkosky 49 Figure 11B. This rock collected from the body of the Canyon Creek Pluton might possibly show crystallization of tonalitic magma (top) following emplacement of dark, mafic dike material (bottom). The lighter colored tonalite contains many small inclusions of the darker dike material, and directly above my finger, the hot tonalite appears to have been smeared up against the dike. Both of these features show that the darker material could have solidified first, with the liquid tonalite, albeit highly viscous, later coming into contact with a cold, solid dike rock. Witkosky 50 Figure 12. This photo of Grizzly Falls (located at the northernmost point of Grizzly Lake) is taken facing west, and shows pervasive fracture sets and a major fault damage zone running approximately north 60° east and subvertically through the Canyon Creek Pluton. The waterfall face is also a major fracture surface, roughly 30 meters high (photo credit to Joshua Graham). Witkosky 51 Figure 13. Beautiful fault slickenlines on a slickensided surface, cutting and displacing a dike in the eastern portion of the study area (photo taken facing roughly due north, with Jose Cardona for scale). The orientations of the slickenlines show that the dominant style of faulting in the study area is strike-slip, with a slight oblique component. Witkosky 52 σ3 σ1 30˚ σ1 σ3 Figure 14. Stereonet shows poles to planar surfaces measured in the study area: blue circles = dikes; purple diamonds = fault planes; and orange squares = fracture sets. Field data was compiled digitally using Stereonet 8 (Allmendinger 2011-2012). The predominant subvertical orientations of these structures result in pole clusters falling on the boundary of the stereonet. The best-fit line is in black in the center, and is well representative of the predominant vertical nature of structural features. Shear sense indicators show right lateral strike slip faulting (evidenced by slickenlines and displaced dikes in the study area), and the direction of greatest principal stress (σ1) represent tectonic compression for an east dipping subduction zone. The resulting principal stress directions, along with the best fit line for faults and fracture surfaces, is analogous to a rock cylinder crushing experiment, where the critical angle of failure is measured 30°, counter clockwise, from σ1. Emplacement of the Canyon Creek Pluton can then occur in a shallow brittle regime, beginning with compression, fracturing, dilational opening of fracture sets, and subsequent filling with magma. Witkosky 53 Figure 15. A portion of a previous map drafted in my study area (borrowed and modified from Davis et al., 1965). Davis et al. interpreted the overall geometry of structural features located within the Canyon Creek Pluton to represent a dome like structure, having been emplaced in an episode that involved forceful shouldering of the host rock as the predominant emplacement mechanism (the foliation symbols parallel the contact, meaning that this is essentially a bird’s eye view of the paradigm model that I present in Figure 1 of this paper). My contemporary interpretation on incremental construction through dike amalgamation involves superimposing a finite strain ellipse over the map, to show that the foliation pattern and fold axes drawn by Davis et al. could have resulted from a tectonic stress/strain regime, where S3 represents the principal direction of shortening (roughly parallel to σ1, the direction of greatest principal stress seen in Figure 14) caused by east directed paleo-subduction (the only caveat is that Irwin and Wooden, 1999, report a significant amount of rotation, meaning that a study devoted to reconstructing blocks of continental crust would require a paleomagnetic component). Note that in my study area, the foliation is not documented, which leads to one of two interpretations: either the fracture sets and subsequent diking in my study area exploited subtle, weak foliation planes that remain obscured to the naked eye, or the portion of the pluton in my study area could have been formed in a discrete pulse, forming a shorter-lived magmatic lobe that was just one of several emplacement episodes that built up the Canyon Creek Pluton. Regardless of which of these two interpretations is favored, incremental construction is implied, either by sheeted dike amalgamation, or multiple lobe injections. Witkosky 54 Figure 16. The new model for pluton emplacement, based on contemporary notions of incremental plutonic building episodes, the abundance of dikes and wide contact zone documented in the study area. The timeline of emplacement is hypothetical, and requires some verification through age analyses on dike rocks collected from the study area. This model could have implications on resource exploration, as every branch-like intrusive finger drastically increases the total amount of surface area available for precipitation of metallic minerals. Additionally, this cartoon provides a potential solution for the room problem, as large volumetric displacement of dense, solidified crust can be resolved by considering many small incremental injections over a very long time period. PLATE 1. GEOLOGIC MAP OF THE GRIZZLY LAKE AREA, TRINITY ALPS, KLAMATH MOUNTAINS, CALIFORNIA Map location BY RYAN D. WITKOSKY, AUGUST 2012 Topographic base, Thompson Peak Quadrangle, California, 7.5 Minute Series (U.S. Geological Survey, 2012) Legend 60 Hornblende Biotite Tonalite (pluton)- leucocratic, felsic, medium-grained, phaneritic, plutonic rock containing mostly plagioclase and quartz, with biotite and minor hornblende Kt 00 { { 41 52 Cretaceous G rizzly B utte 84 MN U D 60 0 0 00 60 64 0 0 0 0 68 0 76 0 0 65 0 r 20 Kt * * 1 1 10 72 0 0 79 66 15 35 20 81 1 47 1 1 20 3 84 8000 L ois 66 66 L ak e 6 3 + * U G r izzl y L ak e 1 2 $ 5 14 1 1 $ 10 15 0.3 $ 72 0 0 3 0.3 $ 2 2 3 $ 0.3 0.3 3 3 20 76 0 0 10 D 10 5 10 25 76 0 0 66 7 3 1 56 86 Dhs 10 G rizzly M eadows 0 Andesite Hornblende Porphyry Dacite Plagioclase Porphyry Greenstone 3 3 3 0 70 Glaciation 68 0 72 0 + C 8000 0 ly 60 81 $ Hand sample location 56 0 0 0 76 G rizz METERS 64 0 0 72 67 *+ Location of base camps Oriented sample location 0.5 3000 FEET Strike of vertical foliation Dikes- dashed where inferred, dotted where concealed. Numerics on terminal ends are thickness in meters, and terminal ends do not necessarily represent termination of the dike, but the extent to which they were exposed and/or mapped. 0.5 0 14 Detailed transect location (not to scale; each transect contains at least 3 oriented samples with exact locations not shown on this map) 71 CONTOUR INTERVAL = 80 FEET Strike and dip of metamorphic foliation71 if located within the pluton, represents a measurement made in a wall rock enclave (small arrow indicates trend and plunge of fold hinge lineation measured in quartz ribbons) Fault- with shear sense indicators, or U/D indicating up/down apparent displacement (dashed where inferred, dotted where concealed). Single arrow indicates trend and plunge of slickenlines. SCALE 1:8000 68 0 0 1000 60 Contact margin- a broad, diffuse zone up to 100 m thick 61 1000 Dhs Explanation of Symbols 15° 2000 Devonian G r izzl y C r 79 { { Salmon Hornblende56Schist (host rock)- mafic, 00 amphibolite grade metamorphic rock with pervasive slaty cleavage planes, and isoclinally folded, boudinaged quartz ribbons 48 0 0 N Paleozoic 0 64 0 59 Mesozoic 51 { 65 84 0 0 2 88 76 00 00 0.3 Caes ar Peak 7600 84 0 0 T hom ps on Peak $2 72 0 0 NORTH PLATE 2. CENTRAL TRANSECT ALONG THE CONTACT BETWEEN THE PLUTON AND HOST ROCK FROM PLATE 1 BY RYAN D. WITKOSKY, AUGUST 2012 (the same legend holds true as that of the geologic map in Plate 1; border numerics = scale in meters) Figure T3. Small aplitic veins initially intrude perpendicular or oblique to the highlighted foliation 16 50 planes of the brittle host rock, then gradually follow a path of least resistance, exploiting foliation planes in the schist 45 (Big Blue for scale). Figure T4. Arm of large feeder dike. This tonalite apophysis is the last instance of plutonic rock found intruding into host rock in the central transect (photo credit to R. Heermance). 12 8 4 0 4 40 8 89 12 16 50 Dhs 35 45 30 Dhs Kt 25 Mega-enclave 35 20 72 30 Figure T2. Contact obliquely 15 cuts foliation in host rock. The structural fabric (foliation) has been highlighted to show that it is 10 not parallel to the contact margin, as predicted by the 5 paradigm in an episode of forceful plutonic emplacemnent. 0 16 40 88 PRE-EXISTING FOLIATION IN HOST ROCK... 25 * 20 44 Kt 12 8 4 0 * * 71 SEM Sample 5 4 Figure T1. Brecciated zone of wall rock enclaves. In the contact zone, numerous brecciated angular fragments of dark host rock are found as enclaves in the lighter colored plutonic rock (ruler for scale seen below center of image; photo credit to R. Heermance). 8 12 16 Figure T5. SEM image showing preferred orientation in mineral grains of the host rock. Grains are 15 deformed and forced into alignment so their long axes form horizontal bands across the image, but not parallel to the contact, as seen in Figure T2. This shows that the structural fabric of the host rock was created in a previous deformational event, and not a 10 result of pluton emplacement, as predicted by rthe paradigm. SEM working conditions are as follows: low vacuum with 20.00 Pa H20; accelerating voltage20.00 kV; spot size- 7.0; working distance- 19.999 mm; filament current- 2.68 A; beam current- 95 µA; scale bar shown in lower left hand corner of image. PLUTONIC ROCK FROM 0 THE CONTACT ZONE... Figure T6. SEM image showing random grain orientation in plutonic rock. No microstructural or ductile deformation, and mineral grains are randomly oriented, contrary to the predictions of the paradigm. SEM working conditions are same as in Figure T5, except working distance is 10.002 mm, and scale bar in lower left hand corner is larger.