VALLES CALDERA
This image focuses on volcanic features in north-
central New Mexico, the regional setting of which was
shown in the preceding Plate. Dominating the scene and
that in the oblique space photograph taken during the
Apollo 9 Mission (Figure V-2.1)
is the subcircular Valles caldera in the center of the Jemez
Mountain volcanic complex about 70 km north of
Albuquerque (Bailey and Smith, 1978). The central caldera,
19 by 24 km in rim dimensions, is the classic example of
resurgent cauldrons as defined by Smith and Bailey (1968).
The Jemez Mountain volcanic complex is built on a
basement of Precambrian igneous-metamorphic and
Paleozoic/Mesozoic sedimentary rocks on the west
and overlaps and interbeds with Cenozoic continental
sediments that fill the Rio Grande Rift on the east (Ross
et al., 1961). The abrupt escarpment along the
western edge of the Sierra Nacimiento adjacent to the Jemez
Mountains marks the trace of the Nacimiento Fault, a reverse
fault that bounds a block of predominantly Precambrian rocks
(Figure V-2.2).
The volcanic field itself consists of material erupted from more
than 100 vents. A variety of landforms, ranging from maar
volcanoes to massive silicic domes, was created.
Jemez volcanism began about 10 to 12 Ma ago with the
eruption of basalts, andesites, dacites, and rhyolites that
continued until about 3 Ma, building up a broad thick
( >1000 m) pile of flow units. Flanking the complex
are several basalt fields, including the Santa Ana Mesa
(south), Cerros del Rio (east), and Los Setos (north). At
1.7, 1.4, and 1.1 Ma, rhyolite magma erupted explosively,
spreading thick ashflow deposits (Bandelier Tuff) that locally
attain thickness of + 300 m
(Figure V-2.3) over the flanks of the complex. These
successive expulsions of magma caused collapse of the roof
of the magma chamber along ring faults, forming three nested
calderas. Two of these, the Toledo caldera (1.45 Ma) and the
Valles (1.09 Ma) are of nearly equal size. Only the youngest of
these (Valles) has a well-defined morphology that forms
a prominent depression. The cumulative thickness of volcanic
infill within the calderas reaches 1 km on the west and 3.5 km
on the east. Following the collapse of the Valles caldera, renewal
of magma pressure in the underlying chamber caused uplift of the
caldera floor and formation of a central resurgent dome. Accompanying
this resurgent uplift, eruption of viscous rhyolite along the caldera
ring-fault system resulted in extrusion of an arcuate ring of
lava domes around the central resurgent uplift. Redondo Dome is
transected by a northeast-trending medial graben apparently controlled
by older basement structures. Pleistocene erosion has cut deep radial
canyons into the flanks of the complex. Cutting of the exceptionally
deep San Diego Canyon on the southwest flank caused draining of a
former caldera lake.
The intersection between the Jemez Lineament and the
Rio Grande Rift provided a structural control for generation
and emplacement of the Jemez magma system. Other volcanic
fields, including the Raton basalt field and the Spanish Peaks
to the northeast, the Springerville field, and the Mt. Taylor field,
lie generally proximate to the lineament. Several domical mountains
and cones in the Taos Plateau volcanic field stand just west of the
Rio Grande River in the Rift where it extends into Colorado. An
Oligocene intrusive complex lies along the eastern rift margin
northeast of the Sandia Mountains. North-south Tertiary dikes
(barely visible in the image) cut Cretaceous and Tertiary sedimentary
rocks along the northeast flank of the San Juan Basin.
The Mt. Taylor volcanic field is another of the large Tertiary
outpourings that concentrated along the periphery of the Colorado
Plateau since the Miocene (Hunt, 1938). Basalts and other lava
types extruded from its many central vents into Cretaceous
sedimentary rocks, building up an unbroken plateau-the Mt.
Taylor Mesa-that extends 500m or more above the surrounding
terrain (see Figure V-1.3).
Mt. Taylor itself (just below the bottom edge of the Plate) is a
stratocone-shaped structure that towers to 3500 m above sea
level. At the low Sun angle in this late Fall image, individual volcanic
cones and necks, some of Holocene age, are discernible in the central
mesa. Mesa Prieta is an outlier of this same field.
The Christensen and Lipman (1972) model alluded to in
Plate V-1 proposed a plate tectonics control over volcanism in
the southwestern United States. Prior to 30 Ma ago, calc-alkaline
volcanism associated with the continental side of a subduction zone
was predominant. Following deactivation of this zone as the North
American Plate began to override the East Pacific Rise, bimodal
volcanism-both basaltic and alkalic series-became the norm.
However, the Jemez Mountain field may be an exception inasmuch as
a wide range of magma types have been emplaced in the last 13 Ma.
Caption modified from comments by R. Bailey (USGS) and G.
Heiken (Los Alamos National Laboratory, personal communication).
Landsat 10856-17022-7, November 26, 1974.
Continue to Plate V-3 |
Chapter 3 Table of Contents |
Complete Table of Contents |
Geomorphology Home Page
|
 |