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Dinky Creek Pluton EarthCache

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Hidden : 7/25/2011
Difficulty:
5 out of 5
Terrain:
4.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   not chosen (not chosen)

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Geocache Description:

Recent theories of large granite pluton formation start with the partial melting of a subducting plate. This magma rises up through fractures near the surface where the magma spreads out laterally along a horizontal fracture.

The Dinkey Dome Pluton is reached by a moderate to strenuous hike into the Dinkey Lakes Wilderness. The area is at an elevation of about 8800 feet. The parking area is accessible by unpaved Forest Service access roads. The roads do get pretty rough, so a high clearance vehicle would be a very good idea. Winter snows will make the EarthCache inaccessible.

The Dinky Dome Pluton and Dinkey Creek Pluton have been used as an example of a granite pluton that was formed by partial melting of a subducting plate. Both plutons are found in the Dinkey Lakes Wilderness, but the coordinates take to an outcrop of the Dinkey Dome Plution. As the Farallon plate subducted under the North American plate, the subduced oceanic crust began to warm and undergo partial melting.

Partial melting occurs as a result of the different melting points of the various minerals in rocks. As the rock heats up, the minerals that melt at the lowest temperatures begin to melt first forming a magma, while the minerals with high melting points remain solid. The liquid magma is less dense than the solids, so it begins to separate from the solids moving upward through fractures in the rock above. In this case, the magma that formed from the partial melting of the Farallon Plate was granitic in composition.

Between 104 and 90 million years ago, this granitic magma migrated up toward the surface along fractures in the overlying rock. Near the surface there was a horizontal plane of weakness between an existing pluton and meta-sedimentary (metamorphic rocks that were sedimentary rocks) that rocks above it. The magma stopped its upward movement and instead began spreading out laterally along this horizontal contact.

Repeated pulses of magma upwelling through the same conduits gradually pushed the previously intruded magma further away from the conduits horizontally. The subsequent pulses also thickened the magma chamber by either uplifting the meta-sedimentary rocks or the dropping the underlying pluton.

Overtime the granite magma cooled forming the granite of the Dinky Dome Pluton. Continued uplift of the Sierra Nevada Mountains increased the erosion on the overlying meta-sedimentary rocks. Erosion continued until all but a few roof pendants (see Dinkey Creek Roof Pendant)of the meta-sedimentary rocks remained exposing the Dinky Dome Pluton as we see it today.

One of the lines of evidence for the horizontal movement of the Dinkey Dome magma between the meta-sedimentary rocks and the older pluton comes from the magnetic foliation within the Dinkey Dome Pluton. Magnetic foliation comes from the orientation of small magnetic minerals within the granite. The orientation of these magnetic particles became aligned with the earth’s magnetic field as the magma solidified. The magnetic foliation is measured by advanced instruments that cancel out the relatively powerful magnetic field of the earth so that the weak magnetic field of the minerals can be observed. In magmas, magnetic foliation is used to describe the flow patterns within cooling magmas.

In addition, the age of the granite rocks within the Dinky Dome Pluton supports the formation of the pluton from one or two vertical conduits and spreading out laterally. The youngest granitic rocks within the Dinky Dome Pluton are near the center. Older rocks surround these younger ones.

image from Petford et. al. 2000

This process is thought to have taken place over a period of less than 100,000 years instead of the tens of millions of years required by previous theories.

Logging requirements:
Send me a note with :

  1. The text "GC30XM8 Dinky Creek Pluton" on the first line.
  2. The number of people in your group (put in the log as well).
  3. Describe the size of the individual mineral grains at the coordinates.
  4. What does the size indicate about the method of cooling?
  5. What features to you see that could be attributed to the magnetic foliation?

The above information was compiled from the following sources:

  • Farallon Plate (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farallon_Plate
  • Subduction Zones; Plate Tectonics, 1996 - 2005 platetectonics.com. http://www.platetectonics.com/book/page_12.asp
  • Farallon Plate, USGS, http://pubs.usgs.gov/gip/dynamic/Farallon.html Last updated: 05.05.99
  • The Farallon Plate NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio; http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a000000/a001300/a001322/index.html
  • Martin-Hernandez, F. et al Editors, Magnetic Fabric Methods and Applications, Geological Society, Special Publication 238, , Geological Society of London 2004
  • Petford, N., Cruden, A., McCaffrey, K and Vigneresse, J-L., Granite magma formation, transport and emplacement in the Earth's crust, Nature, V. 408, p. 669-673, December 2000.

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