- Chilcotin Plateau Basalts
The Chilcotin Plateau Basalts, also called the Chilcotin Group, is a medium-sized
large igneous province that forms avolcanic plateau running parallel with theGaribaldi Volcanic Belt in south-centralBritish Columbia ,Canada .During Late Oligocene and
Pliocene times, one of the largestflood basalt s ever to appear on British Columbia'sInterior Plateau engulfed 25,000 km2 of thePacific Northwest , forming a medium-sizedlarge igneous province . Volcanism spanned about 16 million years, and occurred in three main magmatic episodes: 15-13 Ma, 9-6 Ma, and 3-1 Ma. Eruptions were most vigorous 6-10 million years ago and 2-3 million years ago, when most of the basalt was released. Less extensive eruptions continued 0.01 to 1.6 million years ago. [http://gsc.nrcan.gc.ca/volcanoes/cat/belt_chilcotin_e.php National Resources Canada - Catalogue of Canadian volcanoes: Chilcotin Plateau basalts] Retrieved on2008-03-15 ]These lava flows have been extensively exposed by erosion resulting from the great floods that flowed in this region throughout the past ice ages, which laid bare many layers of the basalt flows along the
Fraser Canyon fromSoda Creek south toCanoe Creek elsewhere along the Chilcotin, Chilko, Chilanko andTaseko River s atChasm Provincial Park along Upper Deadman River. Prior to Late Pleistocene glacial erosion these centers formed a series of coalesced, low-profileshield volcano es.The Chilcotin Plateau Basalts are nearly to and potentially linked to the
Columbia River Basalt Group in theUnited States , which lies across parts of the states ofWashington ,Oregon , andIdaho . [ [http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-124343378.html Igneous rock associations in Canada 3. Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) in Canada and adjacent regions: 3] Retrieved on2008-03-15 ] Its morphology is similar to other volcanic plateaus such as theSnake River Plain in Idaho and parts ofIceland .Formation of the Chilcotin Plateau Basalts
Starting about 16 million years lava flow after lava flow poured out, eventually accumulating to a thickness of more than Unit km|2|0. As the molten rock came to the surface, the earth's crust gradually sank into the space left by the rising lava. The subsidence of the crust produced a large, slightly depressed lava plain. Strata include crudely columnar-jointed
pahoehoe flows, some thick, tiered flows, minor pillow lava and pillowbreccia , and rare silicictephra layers. Individual vents forbasalt volcanism include smallcinder cone s,volcanic plug s, andgabbro ic feeders, which locally crosscut lava flows. These form a northwest trend along the axis of the large igneous province.Transition of flood volcanism
Prior to 16 million years ago, the western Cascade Volcanic Arc
stratovolcano es erupted with periodic regularity for over 27 million years, even as they do today. An abrupt transition to shield volcanic flooding occurred throughout theMiocene andPliocene . The ultimate cause of this volcanism is still up for debate, however, the most widely accepted idea is that aback-arc basin behind theCascadia subduction zone initied the widespread and voluminous basaltic volcanism. Some centers erupted along pre-existing brittle fault systems while volcanism along its northern portion is most widely believed to have been related to a center of upwellingmagma called theAnahim hotspot (similar to that associated with present day Hawaii), creating the Rainbow, Ilgachuz andItcha Range shield volcano es which also in turn form part of theAnahim Volcanic Belt . The exact nature of the relationship between the Anahim hotspot and the Chilcotin Plateau Basalts is, however, unknown.Notable vents
Volcanoes of the Chilcotin Plateau Basalts include:
*
Alixton Creek
*Browns Lake
*Crows Bar
*Prentice Gulch
*Thaddeus Lake
*Alkali Lake
*Canoe Creek
*Mount Noel
*Dog Creek
*Leon Creek
*Lambly Creek
*Clisbako Caldera Complex
*Missezula Lake
*Nicola (Chester)
*Quilchena Creek
*West Kettle River
*Hydraulic Lake
*Chilcotin Creek Cone
*Lightning Peak
*Black Dome Mountain
*Stockton Hill
*Skoatl Point
*Bare Hill
*Itcha Range
*Ilgachuz Range
*Rainbow Range
*Alasla Mountain
*Tin Cup Mountain
*Mount Begbie
*Forestry Hill
*Lone Butte
*Anahim Peak References
External links
* [http://article.pubs.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/ppv/RPViewDoc?_handler_=HandleInitialGet&journal=cjes&volume=38&calyLang=eng&articleFile=e00-121.pdf The Cheslatta Lake suite:Miocene mafic, alkaline magmatism in central British Columbia]
ee also
*
Chilcotin Plateau
*Chilcotin Ranges
*Wells Gray-Clearwater volcanic field
*Garibaldi Volcanic Belt
*Anahim Volcanic Belt
*Northern Cordilleran Volcanic Province
*List of volcanoes in Canada
*Volcanism in Canada
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