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Miocene rapakivi granites in the southern Death Valley region, California, USA

December 31, 2005

Rapakivi granites in the southern Death Valley region, California, include the 12.4-Ma granite of Kingston Peak, the ca. 10.6-Ma Little Chief stock, and the 9.8-Ma Shoshone pluton. All of these granitic rocks are texturally zoned from a porphyritic rim facies, characterized by rapakivi textures and miarolitic cavities, to an equigranular aplite core. These granites crystallized from anhydrous and peraluminous to metaluminous magmas that were more oxidized and less alkalic than type rapakivi granites from southern Finland. Chemical and isotope (Nd–Sr–Pb) data suggest that rapakivi granites of the southern Death Valley region were derived by partial melting of lower crustal rocks (possibly including Mesozoic plutonic component) with some mantle input as well; they were emplaced at shallow crustal levels (4 km) in an actively extending orogen.

Publication Year 2005
Title Miocene rapakivi granites in the southern Death Valley region, California, USA
DOI 10.1016/j.earscirev.2005.07.006
Authors James P. Calzia, O.T. Ramo
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Earth-Science Reviews
Index ID 70180922
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Western Geographic Science Center