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Drake Peak — A structurally complex rhyolite center in southeastern Oregon

December 31, 1980

The Drake Peak volcanic center of middle Miocene age, located about 25 km northeast of Lakeview, Oreg., is a structurally complex eruptive center that resulted from several episodes of intrusion and extrusion of rhyolite. Two thousand meters of andesite and basalt flows, lahars, and volcaniclastic rocks of late Eocene age, and of basaltic andesite, tuff, and flood basalts of Eocene to middle Miocene age were structurally domed by the piston-like intrusion of a large body of rhyolite. The eruption of rhyolite flows at 14.3±2 million years followed the structural doming, and upper Miocene tuffs and basalt flows lapped against the dome and the rhyolite. A felsitic rhyolite ring intrusion 3 km in diameter, emplaced during the doming, is now exposed in the deeply eroded core of the dome. The rhyolites range in Si02 content from 69 to 76 percent and are peraluminous. The nonporphyritic ring intrusion is more silicic than the flows erupted later, which contain up to 23 percent phenocrysts of plagioclase, hypersthene, biotite, clinopyroxene, and quartz. The progressive depletion of Mg, Ca, Sr, Fe, Ti, and Al and the enrichment in silicon and rubidium are compatible with the generation of the observed rhyolite types by tapping a compositionally zoned magma chamber.

Publication Year 1980
Title Drake Peak — A structurally complex rhyolite center in southeastern Oregon
DOI 10.3133/pp1124E
Authors Ray Wells
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Series Title Professional Paper
Series Number 1124
Index ID pp1124E
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Geology, Minerals, Energy, and Geophysics Science Center