Showing posts with label Era Pliocene. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Era Pliocene. Show all posts
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Black Mesa
It seems, wherever you go in this part of the world, you find a Black Mesa. It shouldn’t be surprising, really, when you consider the Rio Grande crosses an oblique line of volcanoes.
There are two in this area. North of town, the ten-mile long finger of land between the Rios Grande and Chama has been called the Black Mesa by geologists since George Wheeler named it so in 1876. Down on the San Ildefonso grant near the road that people use to commute between the valley and Los Alamos there’s another, rising 500' from the surrounding flat lands that slope to the river.
When I first moved here, I was told or read the San Ildefonso mesa was the cap of the Valles Grande volcano that had landed there when it erupted. I’ve also been told it was the last retreat of the pueblo peoples fighting Diego de Vargas in the entrada and that there’s a pair of peregrine falcons nesting there.
Ted Galusha and John Blick resolved the ambiguous naming problem by calling the San Ildefonso mesa the Round Mountain. I prefer to find another name for the peninsula of land, perhaps Wheeler’s Black Mesa or the Chamita Black Mesa.
They also dispelled any romantic notions about its origins.
It’s an independent cinder cone built around a volcanic neck that was formed some 4.4 million years ago in the early Pliocene, possibly as part of the Cerros del Rio volcanic field southeast of the Otowi bridge. According to Daniel Koning, one of its lava flows has been dated to about the time the Rio Grande was becoming a perennial river, long before the Toledo and Valle Grande eruptions.
The base is dark gray to black basalt. The top is covered with river cobbles and pebbles laid down about 1.5 million years ago, long before the lakes described by Steven Reneau and David Dethier.
Cinder cones are the simplest type of volcanos, central vents surrounded by fans of erupted debris. Volcanic necks are formed when the magma hardens within the volcano. Red cinders found on the southwest side suggest an eruption was through that side.
When water washes away the softer materials that surrounds a volcano, the basaltic blocks drop into a dense mass around the base that eventually prevents further erosion. If indeed this volcano was standing in 500' of water in the early Pleistocene, there was a great deal of water available to consolidate the current formation into a fortress which has since survived those lakes and, perhaps, created the fans where juniper now grow.
Top: Black mesa behind cottonwoods along the Rio Grande taken from the west side along route 30.
Bottom: Mesa taken from northeast; the ranch road wanders towards it after leaving the far arroyo.
Labels:
Black Mesa,
Black Mesa - Chamita,
Era Pleistocene,
Era Pliocene,
Geology,
New Mexico,
San Ildefonso,
Volcano
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
Santa Fe Group
Santa Fe Group is a term like sparrow or hummingbird. It allows you to describe things fairly accurately when, in fact, you don’t really know enough to be specific.
Ted Galusha and John Blick say that at one time or another it’s been used to describe almost anything along the Rio Grande. They narrow the term to middle Miocene and early Pliocene sediments found between the Sangre de Cristo and Jemez.
They identify two general areas, one they call Chamita, the other Tesuque. Within the second, which is the one found where I live, they identified five major strata: Nambé, Skull Ridge, Pojoaque, Chama-el Rito, and Ojo Caliente sandstone.
The laminated formations you see along 285 when you drive through Arroyo Seco between Santa Fé and Española are from the Skull Ridge and Pojoaque members. According to Daniel Koning, the first was deposited 16.2 to 14.6 million years ago; the second is dated between 14.6 to 11.6 million years ago.
Koning also indicates that rocks came from two sources in the late Miocene. Those towards the north and west are from the Peñasco embayment between the Picuris and Santa Fe Ranges of the Sangre de Cristo, while those to the south and east generally arrived from the Santa Fe Range.
The Los Barrancos fault zone runs to the west of the highway. Sediments to the east, the ones you see, are older than the ones to the west, which are the ones that come close to my house.
The rocks on the west side of the road in the top picture are from the Peñasco embayment with the Skull Ridge member exposed in Arroyo Seco. The rocks on the east side in the second picture have the same provenance, but are older.
The third picture was taken on Pojoaque pueblo land. Koning identifies them as Skull Ridge layers from the Santa Fe range. In the picture below rocks from the Pojoaque member of the Peñasco embayment rise behind the wall of the far arroyo.
Labels:
Era Miocene,
Era Pliocene,
Geology,
New Mexico,
Pojoaque Member,
Santa Fe Group,
Skull Ridge Member,
Tesuque Formation
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