Hinsdale Formation

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Short description: A geologic formation in New Mexico
Hinsdale Formation
Stratigraphic range: Neogene
26.8–4.4 Ma
Devils Lake, Powderhorn Wilderness, Hinsdale County, Colorado, USA.jpg
Hinsdale Formation at its type locality in Colorado (Devils Lake, Powderhorn Wilderness)
TypeFormation
OverliesLos Pinos Formation[1]
Thickness1,200 ft (370 m)
Lithology
PrimaryBasalt, andesite, rhyolite
Location
Coordinates [ ⚑ ] 37°47′13″N 107°19′08″W / 37.787°N 107.319°W / 37.787; -107.319
RegionColorado
New Mexico
CountryUnited States
Type section
Named forHinsdale County, Colorado
Named byCharles Whitman Cross
Year defined1911
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The Hinsdale Formation is a geologic formation exposed in southwestern Colorado and northern New Mexico.[2] It has a radiometric age of 4.4 to 26.8 million years, corresponding to the Neogene period.[3]

Description

The Hinsdale Formation is a bimodal volcanic formation, containing silica-poor olivine basalt and high-silica rhyolite with only small quantities of volcanic rock of intermediate composition.[4] The sequence reflects assimilation and fractional crystallization (AFC) of a primitive basalt magma.[5] Total thickness is in excess of 1,200 feet (370 m).[2]

The formation is the youngest volcanic formation of the San Juan volcanic field, and is separated from older units by a significant erosional surface.[2] Radiometric ages range from 4.4 to 26.8 million years.[3] The formation once formed an extensive thin veneer over the San Juan volcanic field before itself being eroded.[5]

The change to bimodal association coincided with the transition from Laramide compression to Rio Grande rift extension, a pattern seen elsewhere in the western United States.[5]

Economic geology

The rich mineralization of the San Juan Volcanic Field has been attributed to early intrusions of the Hinsdale Formation.[6]

History of investigation

The formation was first named the Hinsdale Volcanic Series by Charles Whitman Cross in 1911 for exposures in Hinsdale County, Colorado.[2] Larsen redefined the unit as the Hinsdale Formation and included the Los Pinos Member.[7] Barker removed the Los Pinos as its own formation in 1958.[8]

Footnotes

References




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