Age of the dacite of Sunset Amphitheater, a voluminous Pleistocene tephra from Mount Rainier (USA), and implications for Cascade glacial stratigraphy

The dacite of Sunset Amphitheater, Mount Rainier (USA), illustrates the difficulties in establishing accurate ages of Pleistocene tephra eruptions. Nearly uniform whole-rock, glass, and mineral compositions, texture, and phenocryst assemblage establish that certain conspicuous dissected pumice expos...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sisson, T.W., Schmitt, A.K., Danišík, Martin, Calvert, A.T., Pempena, N., Huang, C.Y., Shen, C.C.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: ELSEVIER 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP160102427
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/90783
_version_ 1848765426720309248
author Sisson, T.W.
Schmitt, A.K.
Danišík, Martin
Calvert, A.T.
Pempena, N.
Huang, C.Y.
Shen, C.C.
author_facet Sisson, T.W.
Schmitt, A.K.
Danišík, Martin
Calvert, A.T.
Pempena, N.
Huang, C.Y.
Shen, C.C.
author_sort Sisson, T.W.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The dacite of Sunset Amphitheater, Mount Rainier (USA), illustrates the difficulties in establishing accurate ages of Pleistocene tephra eruptions. Nearly uniform whole-rock, glass, and mineral compositions, texture, and phenocryst assemblage establish that certain conspicuous dissected pumice exposures scattered from Mount Rainier to southern Puget Sound are products of the same Pleistocene Plinian eruption. Deposit thicknesses and pumice sizes support an eruption on the order of low Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) 5, atypically explosive for dominantly lava-producing Mount Rainier. Statistically permissible 40 Ar/ 39 Ar plateau ages of plagioclase phenocryst separates are 138 ± 20 ka and 101 ± 11 ka (2σ). A previously published result of 206 ± 11 ka is herein shown to result from a sample selection error. Zircon from the pumice yields a U-Th crystallization age of 147 ± 8 ka if the isochron is required to pass through the tephra U-Th isotopic composition. In contrast, pooled (U-Th)/He measurements on the zircon yield an age of 85 ± 6 ka (2σ), which accords with well-behaved 40 Ar/ 39 Ar ages of stratigraphically associated lavas high on Mount Rainier, and is the best estimate of the pumice's true eruption age. Inclusions of undegassed melt (glass) in the plagioclase separates are proposed as biasing apparent 40 Ar/ 39 Ar plateau ages to old values through coupling of undegassed magmatic excess Ar with radiogenic Ar that accumulated post-eruptively from relatively K-rich glass. U-Th ages record zircon growth prior to eruption, consistent with a possible complex history of advanced solidification followed by remobilization. The ca. 85 ka eruption age confirms that bracketing glacial tills on the flanks of Mount Rainier were products of the Penultimate Glaciation (MIS 6) and Last Glacial Maximum (MIS 2). This eruption age also provides an important time marker for glacial and other sedimentary deposits in southern Puget Sound lowland that, excepting the Vashon Drift (MIS 2), generally lack reliable age determinations.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T11:35:04Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-90783
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:35:04Z
publishDate 2019
publisher ELSEVIER
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-907832023-04-20T01:37:44Z Age of the dacite of Sunset Amphitheater, a voluminous Pleistocene tephra from Mount Rainier (USA), and implications for Cascade glacial stratigraphy Sisson, T.W. Schmitt, A.K. Danišík, Martin Calvert, A.T. Pempena, N. Huang, C.Y. Shen, C.C. Science & Technology Physical Sciences Geosciences, Multidisciplinary Geology Pleistocene 40Ar/39Ar Plagioclase (U-Th)/He Zircon Tephra Till Marine isotope stage Puget Sound U-TH ZIRCON (U-TH)/HE HIGH-PRECISION TRACE-ELEMENT CRATER LAKE CALIFORNIA ERUPTION DIFFERENTIATION DISEQUILIBRIUM GEOCHRONOLOGY The dacite of Sunset Amphitheater, Mount Rainier (USA), illustrates the difficulties in establishing accurate ages of Pleistocene tephra eruptions. Nearly uniform whole-rock, glass, and mineral compositions, texture, and phenocryst assemblage establish that certain conspicuous dissected pumice exposures scattered from Mount Rainier to southern Puget Sound are products of the same Pleistocene Plinian eruption. Deposit thicknesses and pumice sizes support an eruption on the order of low Volcanic Explosivity Index (VEI) 5, atypically explosive for dominantly lava-producing Mount Rainier. Statistically permissible 40 Ar/ 39 Ar plateau ages of plagioclase phenocryst separates are 138 ± 20 ka and 101 ± 11 ka (2σ). A previously published result of 206 ± 11 ka is herein shown to result from a sample selection error. Zircon from the pumice yields a U-Th crystallization age of 147 ± 8 ka if the isochron is required to pass through the tephra U-Th isotopic composition. In contrast, pooled (U-Th)/He measurements on the zircon yield an age of 85 ± 6 ka (2σ), which accords with well-behaved 40 Ar/ 39 Ar ages of stratigraphically associated lavas high on Mount Rainier, and is the best estimate of the pumice's true eruption age. Inclusions of undegassed melt (glass) in the plagioclase separates are proposed as biasing apparent 40 Ar/ 39 Ar plateau ages to old values through coupling of undegassed magmatic excess Ar with radiogenic Ar that accumulated post-eruptively from relatively K-rich glass. U-Th ages record zircon growth prior to eruption, consistent with a possible complex history of advanced solidification followed by remobilization. The ca. 85 ka eruption age confirms that bracketing glacial tills on the flanks of Mount Rainier were products of the Penultimate Glaciation (MIS 6) and Last Glacial Maximum (MIS 2). This eruption age also provides an important time marker for glacial and other sedimentary deposits in southern Puget Sound lowland that, excepting the Vashon Drift (MIS 2), generally lack reliable age determinations. 2019 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/90783 10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2019.03.003 English http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP160102427 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ ELSEVIER fulltext
spellingShingle Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
Geology
Pleistocene
40Ar/39Ar
Plagioclase
(U-Th)/He
Zircon
Tephra
Till
Marine isotope stage
Puget Sound
U-TH
ZIRCON (U-TH)/HE
HIGH-PRECISION
TRACE-ELEMENT
CRATER LAKE
CALIFORNIA
ERUPTION
DIFFERENTIATION
DISEQUILIBRIUM
GEOCHRONOLOGY
Sisson, T.W.
Schmitt, A.K.
Danišík, Martin
Calvert, A.T.
Pempena, N.
Huang, C.Y.
Shen, C.C.
Age of the dacite of Sunset Amphitheater, a voluminous Pleistocene tephra from Mount Rainier (USA), and implications for Cascade glacial stratigraphy
title Age of the dacite of Sunset Amphitheater, a voluminous Pleistocene tephra from Mount Rainier (USA), and implications for Cascade glacial stratigraphy
title_full Age of the dacite of Sunset Amphitheater, a voluminous Pleistocene tephra from Mount Rainier (USA), and implications for Cascade glacial stratigraphy
title_fullStr Age of the dacite of Sunset Amphitheater, a voluminous Pleistocene tephra from Mount Rainier (USA), and implications for Cascade glacial stratigraphy
title_full_unstemmed Age of the dacite of Sunset Amphitheater, a voluminous Pleistocene tephra from Mount Rainier (USA), and implications for Cascade glacial stratigraphy
title_short Age of the dacite of Sunset Amphitheater, a voluminous Pleistocene tephra from Mount Rainier (USA), and implications for Cascade glacial stratigraphy
title_sort age of the dacite of sunset amphitheater, a voluminous pleistocene tephra from mount rainier (usa), and implications for cascade glacial stratigraphy
topic Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
Geology
Pleistocene
40Ar/39Ar
Plagioclase
(U-Th)/He
Zircon
Tephra
Till
Marine isotope stage
Puget Sound
U-TH
ZIRCON (U-TH)/HE
HIGH-PRECISION
TRACE-ELEMENT
CRATER LAKE
CALIFORNIA
ERUPTION
DIFFERENTIATION
DISEQUILIBRIUM
GEOCHRONOLOGY
url http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP160102427
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/90783