The Geology of Big Bend National Park
Transcription
The Geology of Big Bend National Park
The Geology of Big Bend National Park: What have we learned since Maxwell and others (1967)? Field Trip Guide John C. White, editor Field Trip Contributors: Dan S. Barker, University of Texas at Austin Tim W. Duex, University of Louisiana Lafayette Richard J. Erdlac, Jr., University of Texas Permian Basin Gary L. Kinsland, University of Louisiana Lafayette Thomas M. Lehman, Texas Tech University Rolfe D. Mandel, University of Kansas Don F. Parker, Baylor University Carol Purchase, National Park Service Kevin M. Urbanczyk, Sul Ross State University John C. White, Baylor University and Sul Ross State University John Zak, Texas Tech University THE GEOLOGY OF BIG BEND NATIONAL PARK: WHAT HAVE WE LEARNED SINCE M AXWELL AND OTHERS (1967)? Geological Society of America South-Central Meeting, April 2002, Sul Ross State University, Alpine, Texas. Table of Contents Page Introduction............................................................................................................1 Day 1.....................................................................................................................3 The Geology of Elephant Mountain (D.S. Barker).................................................5 Stop 1. Elephant Mountain WMA..........................................................................6 Late Quaternary alluvial stratigraphy in Calamity Creek valley, Elephant Mountain Wildlife Management Area (R.D. Mandel) Stop 2. West Entrance to Big Bend National Park..............................................12 The Terlingua Monocline (R.J. Erdlac, Jr.) Old Maverick Road (T.M. Lehman)......................................................................15 Stop 3. Peña Mountain.......................................................................................15 Pen and Aguja Formations (T.M. Lehman) Stop 4. Santa Elena Canyon...............................................................................21 Terlingua Creek Delta (K.M. Urbanczyk) Stop 5. Horseshoe Canyon.................................................................................24 Horseshoe Canyon Volcanic Dome (D.F. Parker) Stop 6. Tuff Canyon............................................................................................33 Tuff Canyon (D.S. Barker) Stop 7. Sotol Vista..............................................................................................36 The Sierra Quemada Caldera (T.W. Duex and G.L. Kinsland) Terlingua Monocline Overview (R.J. Erdlac, Jr.) Day 2 Stop 8. The Basin...............................................................................................43 Extracaldera vents of the Pine Canyon Caldera (J.C. White) Stop 9. Pine Canyon Vista..................................................................................47 Pine Canyon watershed research program (K.M. Urbanczyk and J. Zak) The Pine Canyon Caldera (K.M. Urbanczyk and J.C. White) Stop 10. Boquillas Overlook................................................................................50 Geomorphologic changes in the Rio Grande / Rio Bravo channel and floodplain (C. Purchase) Stop 11. Boquillas Canyon..................................................................................51 Rio Grande Holocene Valley Fill (R.D. Mandel) Stop 12. Fossil Bone Exhibit...............................................................................54 A view of the Tornillo Group (T.M. Lehman) Tornillo Flats Grasslands (C. Purchase) References Cited.................................................................................................61 Cover Photo: Landsat image of Big Bend National Park. INTRODUCTION Big Bend National Park is often referred to as the only place in North America where the Appalachia Mountains meet the Rocky Mountains, and this statement does not contain as much hyperbole as one might think. Within the northern part of the park, at Persimmon Gap, Ordovician to Pennsylvanian pelagic and flysch strata deformed during the late Pennsylvanian MarathonOuachita orogeny are overlain by middle Cretaceous limestone, all of which was deformed during the late Cretaceous-early Tertiary Laramide orogeny; in Big Bend National Park, West Coast geology does indeed meet East Coast geology! Even with this remarkable diversity concentrated in such a small part of the park, the geology at Persimmon Gap does not completely represent what one can expect to find in Big Bend National Park. In addition to Paleozoic deep marine strata deformed during the Ouachita-Marathon orogeny and middle Cretaceous shallow marine strata deformed during the Laramide orogeny, within the park one can also find: • A complete section of middle to late Cretaceous marine sediments correlative with central Texas strata. • A late Cretaceous to early Tertiary regressive sequence (shallow marine to terrigenous) in which are found numerous important vertebrate fossils. Upper Cretaceous strata have yielded numerous Mosasaurs, Quetzalcoatlus northropi (the largest animal that ever flew), and many Sauropod bonebeds. • Middle Tertiary (Eocene to Oligocene) mafic to felsic volcanism, erupted from two calderas, numerous volcanic domes, and several unidentified vents. • Many igneous intrusions, including laccoliths (Government Spring, Grapevine Hills, Rosillos Mountains, McKinney Hills), and several dikes and plutons related to identified volcanic centers. • Miocene to Recent Basin and Range normal faults (a third orogeny) responsible for many of the high, spectacular scarps found in the park (e.g., Mesa de Anguila – Sierra Ponce at the mouth of Santa Elena Canyon, the Sierra del Carmen – Sierra del Caballo Muerto). • Thick sequences of bolson-filling alluvium associated with the two major grabens (the Tornillo graben on the east and the Castolon graben on the west) and overlying Quaternary soils and pediments. As one of the most geologically diverse National Parks in the United States, Big Bend National Park has been the subject of much inquiry, beginning with the early exploration by Robert T. Hill (1901, 1902) and Johan A. Udden (1907). However, the first comprehensive geologic study and map of the park came with the mapping by Ross A. Maxwell, John T. Lonsdale, Roy T. Hazzard, and John A. Wilson intermittently between the years 1936 and 1963. The results of these investigations were published by the University of Texas at Austin Bureau of Economic Geology in 1967 (Maxwell and others, 1967), which remains to this day the only complete geologic map of Big Bend National Park ever published. Since 1967, many studies—too numerous to list here—have been conducted in Big Bend National Park that have built on the pioneering work of Maxwell, Lonsdale, Hazzard, and Wilson, that have greatly improved our 1 understanding of the geologic history of the park, especially in the fields of stratigraphy, paleontology, volcanology, structural geology, geoarchaeology, and geomorphology. In the past decade, much of the focus in the park has been on Environmental Geology, as draught and dams endanger the Rio Grande / Rio Bravo, and as the air quality deteriorates. On this field trip and in this guidebook, we will attempt to present a summary of how our understanding of the geology of Big Bend National Park has improved over the past three decades. This is certainly not a topic that can be addressed adequately on a two-day field trip or in a fifty-something page guidebook, but it will hopefully help inspire future studies in Big Bend National Park—including the production of a revised map of the park—that will continue to contribute to our growing knowledge of this varied and unique area. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The editor would like to thank several people who have contributed to or assisted in the production of this field trip and guidebook. This field trip (and corresponding symposia) was conceived by Kevin Urbanczyk, who has a longterm commitment to furthering our knowledge of Big Bend geology. Kevin also contributed stops for this trip, as have Dan Barker, Tim Duex, Richard Erdlac, Jr., Gary Kinsland, Tom Lehman, Rolfe Mandel, Don Parker, Carol Purchase, and John Zak. These contributions are greatly valued, and without them this field trip would not have been possible. Mary Kay Gordon, department secretary, provided great assistance with working out field trip logistics. Michael O’Ferrall assisted me in the field during the production of the road log. Ross Maxwell’s successor, Frank Deckert, the current park superintendent, is also owed a debt of gratitude for providing fee waivers for our group. Additionally, I extend thanks to several Sul Ross students who have agreed to help during the field trip—I’d list them by name, but as of this writing, I’m not sure who they are! Last, I would like to thank Jennifer White, the person who edits the editor. 2 FIELD TRIP ROADLOG AND STOP ARTICLES DAY ONE This field trip begins at the Sul Ross State University Center parking lot and departs at 7:00 am. Day one begins in Alpine and ends at the Longhorn Ranch Motel after a day in the west side of Big Bend National Park (Figure 1). Exit the campus through Entrance 4, turning left (south) on North Harrison St. (Sate Highway (SH) 223, the shortest numbered highway in the state) and reset your odometer to zero. 0.0 SRSU Entrance 4. Turn left on Harrison St. Intersection of Harrison Road (SH 223) and East Avenue E (Hwy 90/67). 0.1 Turn right (west) and get into the left lane as quickly as possible. 0.3 Intersection of Avenue E (Hwy 90/67) and SH 118. Turn left (south). 11.5 Mount Ord (el. 6700 ft) is at 9:00. 14.2 Border Patrol checkpoint. Cathedral Mountain (el. 6860 ft) is at 3:00. The base of Cathedral Mountain is mapped as Duff Formation tuffaceous sedimentary rock and is overlain by the Mitchell Mesa Tuff, which forms the lower bench. The Mitchell Mesa Tuff is the most widespread ignimbrite in the TransPecos and represents the caldera-forming eruption of the Chinati Mountains caldera (~32 Ma), which lies ~50 miles southeast of Cathedral Mountain (Henry and Price, 1984; Henry and McDowell, 1986). Overlaying the Mitchell Mesa Tuff is the Tascotal Formation, another sequence of tuffaceous sedimentary rocks that represent the volcaniclastic alluvial apron that ringed the Chinati Mountains caldera (Walton, 1979). The Tascotal Formation is capped by basalt mapped by McAnulty (1955) as Rawls Formation, but is almost certainly not. These units represent the upper part of Goldich and Elms’ (1949) Buck Hill series (Table 1). From this point, the highway descends through the Buck Hill series to the underlying Gulfian (Cretaceous) rocks that crop out in the O2 flats. 15.9 Entrance to Woodward Ranch on the right side of the road. For a small fee, visitors are allowed to camp at Woodward Ranch and collect agate and opal that weathers out vesicles in the Sheep Canyon basalt. 20.2 The road passes through an outcrop of Cottonwood Springs Basalt. 21.3 Roadcuts through lava flows of the Potato Hill Andesite. 21.6 A flow of Sheep Canyon Basalt with basal autobreccia. 3 Figure 1. Big Bend National Park and surrounding area. Numbers refer to field trip stops; stop 1 at Elephant Mountain is not shown. “Rawls” Basalt Tascotal Formation Mitchell Mesa Tuff Duff Formation Pruett Formation Cottonwood Springs Basalt Sheep Canyon Basalt Potato Hill Andesite Crossen Trachyte Table 1. Buck Hill Series, adapted from Goldich and Elms (1949). South of Kokernot Mesa, where the Cottonwood Springs Basalt does not crop out, the Pruett and Duff Formations cannot be distinguished and are often mapped as either “Pruett/Duff undifferentiated” or as the Devils Graveyard Formation (Stevens and others, 1984). This predominantly tuffaceous sedimentary unit is stratigraphically equivalent to the Chisos Formation in Big Bend National Park (Maxwell and Dietrich, 1970). 24.8 Eocene lacustrine limestone (Pruett Formation) overlain by a flow of Sheep Canyon basalt. (Collinsworth and Rohr, 1986) 26.4 Stop 1. Turn left into the entrance for Elephant Mountain Wildlife Management Area (WMA). THE GEOLOGY OF ELEPHANT MOUNTAIN Dan S. Barker, Department of Geological Sciences, University of Texas at Austin. Elephant Mountain (el. 6230 ft.) is capped by a discordant sheet (“trapdoor intrusion”) of resistant phonolite and nepheline trachyte. This is the largest of at least thirty such intrusive bodies defining a NNW belt at least 350 km long and only 20 km wide (Potter, 1996). Elephant Mountain lies within a few kilometers of the Ouachita Front, the buried northwestern limit of Paleozoic thrusted metasedimentary rocks. The belt of alkalic intrusions crosses this and the Grenville Front 160 km farther north, without showing clear chemical and isotopic effects of basement variation (James and Henry, 1993; Potter, 1996). The Elephant Mountain igneous rock varies in texture and in amount of nepheline. Anorthoclase is the dominant mineral; in many samples analcime replaces nepheline. The mafic minerals include fayalite, sodic clinopyroxene and sodic amphibole. Chemical analyses of Elephant Mountain samples and more than 1500 other Trans-Pecos igneous rocks are available as PDF files at http://www.geo.utexas.edu/faculty/barker. 5 Stop 1. LATE QUATERNARY ALLUVIAL STRATIGRAPHY IN CALAMITY CREEK VALLEY, ELEPHANT MOUNTAIN WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT AREA Rolfe D. Mandel, Department of Geography, University of Kansas, Lawrence. Stop 1 provides an opportunity to examine late Quaternary alluvium in Calamity Creek valley in the area of Elephant Mountain. This locality was the setting for Claude C. Albritton, Jr. and Kirk Bryan’s benchmark studies that linked Quaternary landscape evolution to climatic change (Albritton and Bryan, 1939; Bryan and Albritton, 1943). It also is the area where J. Charles Kelley, T. N. Campbell, and Donald J. Lehmer conducted one of the earliest and most significant geoarchaeological investigations in North America (Kelley and others, 1940). Albritton and Bryan (1939) recognized three alluvial stratigraphic units in Calamity Creek valley: the Neville, Calamity, and Kokernot formations, in order from the oldest to youngest (Figure 2). They suggested that the Neville formation aggraded during the late Pleistocene. This interpretation was based on the presence of elephant and horse bones in the Neville alluvium, though the integrity of the faunal remains was not considered. The Calamity formation is inset into the Neville formation (Figure 2) and was considered post-Pleistocene in age. According to Bryan and Albritton (1943), artifacts recovered from the upper part of the Calamity formation indicated that most of this stratigraphic unit aggraded before ca. A.D. 700 (1,300 yr B.P.). The Kokernot formation fills channels cut into the Neville and Calamity formations and occurs as a thin veneer (overbank deposit) across the valley floor (Figure 2). Bryan and Albritton (1943) suggested that aggradation of the Kokernot formation was underway prior to A.D. 1200 (800 yr B.P.) and continued until A.D. 1880-1890 (ca. 100 yr B.P.). As with the Calamity formation, they used archaeological evidence to infer the age of the Kokernot formation. Based on their work in Calamity Creek valley, Bryan and Albritton (1943) concluded that alternating stages of erosion and deposition in “valley flats” of the Davis Mountains reflect fluctuations in climate, with alluviation and dissection occurring during moist and dry periods, respectively. They also suggested that the accumulation of caliche (calcium carbonate) in buried soils in Calamity Creek valley is a product of relatively arid conditions, whereas the “humic” (organic-rich) soils are products of former humid conditions. We now know that the driving forces and temporal and spatial patterns of erosion and deposition in drainage networks are much more complex than Bryan and Albritton’s simple model (see Schumm, 1977; Mandel, 1994). However, their use of soil properties to infer past climatic conditions remains valid. The alluvial “formations” defined by Claude Albritton and Kirk Bryan are exposed in a cutbank near the headquarters for the Elephant Mountain Wildlife Management Area (Figure 3). Calamity Creek has migrated laterally into a low terrace, exposing a 5.6-m-high section of valley fill. The lower half of the section was described and sampled in 1996 (Mandel, 1996; Table 1). A unit of silty alluvium (Kokernot formation) composes the upper 60 cm of the section. This unit has been slightly modified by soil development and probably is less than 1,000 6 Figure 2. 7 years old. The Kokernot formation overlies a moderately developed soil developed at the top of a thick package of silty and loamy alluvium (Calamity formation). The most striking feature of the Calamity formation is a thick, dark buried soil at a depth of 267-467 cm below the surface of the terrace. The buried soil has a strongly expressed Bk-BCk profile and is developed in fine-grained alluvium in the lower half of the Calamity formation (Table 2 and Figure 3); the A horizon was stripped off by erosion before burial. Humates from the upper 10 cm of Bk1b2 horizon yielded a radiocarbon age of 6,360+70 yr B.P. (Tx-9018). Given that it is a single radiocarbon date determined on soil, it must be viewed with caution. Nevertheless, this date suggests that aggradation of the Calamity formation was interrupted by landscape stability and soil development during the early part of the middle Holocene. An abrupt, wavy boundary separates the Calamity formation from a remnant of a buried soil developed in fine-grained alluvium that quickly grades downward to sand and gravel. This lowermost buried soil is represented by a truncated Bk horizon with stage II carbonate morphology (common films, threads, and nodules); hence, it fits the description of Albritton and Bryan’s (1939) Neville formation. In sum, Albritton and Bryan’s alluvial-stratigraphic framework for Calamity Creek was remarkably accurate for its time. Although their alluvial “formations” would be designated as allostratigraphic or lithostratigraphic units according to modern stratigraphic nomenclature, Albritton and Bryan had a keen sense of the complex alluvial stratigraphy in Calamity Creek valley. In addition, their age estimates for the alluvial deposits appear to be fairly accurate even though they are not based on radiocarbon ages. Additional geomorphological research, including intensive radiocarbon dating, will be conducted in Calamity Creek valley over the next several years. Much of this research will be coordinated with ongoing archaeological investigations in the area of Elephant Mountain. Robert Mallouf, Director of the Center for Big Bend Studies at Sul Ross University, will discuss some of the results of their archaeological surveys during the presentation at Stop 1. Exit Elephant Mountain WMA and turn left, continuing south on SH 118. As you exit the WMA, reset your odometer to zero. Elephant Mountain WMA Entrance. Kokernot Mesa lies at 12:00; the 0.0 mesa is capped by Crossen Trachyte, which overlies undifferentiated Pruett Formation tuffaceous sediments. These units represent the lowest within the Buck Hill series, and within the Tertiary system in the southern Davis Mountains. 7.6 Road cuts through Boquillas Formation (Upper Cretaceous) flaggy limestone. 11.9 Santiago Mountain at 9:00. Like Elephant Mountain, Santiago Mountain is one of the several nepheline trachyte – phonolite intrusions described earlier. 8 ____________________________________________________________________________ Table 2. Description of the lower half of section along Calamity Creek, Elephant Mountain Wildlife Management Area, Stop 1. ______________________________________________________________________________ Landform: T-1 terrace Slope: 1 percent Drainage class: Well drained Vegetation: Creosote bush, mesquite, prickly pear, bristlegrass, and fluff grass Described by: Rolfe Mandel Date described: November 16, 1996 Remarks: Humates from the upper 10 cm of Bk1b2 horizon yielded a radiocarbon age of 6,360+70 yr B.P. (Tx-9018). ______________________________________________________________________________ Depth Soil (cm) Horizon Description “CALAMITY FORMATION” 267-292 Bk1b2 60% brown (7.5YR 5/4) silty clay loam, brown (7.5YR 4/4) moist, 40% brown (7.5YR 5/3) silty clay loam, brown (7.5YR 4/3) moist; weak medium subangular blocky structure parting to weak fine subangular blocky; hard; common fine films and threads of calcium carbonate; few fine flecks of charcoal; strong effervescence; gradual smooth boundary. 292-332 Bk2b2 50% brown (7.5YR 5/4) silty clay loam, brown (7.5YR 4/4) moist, 25% brown (7.5YR 5/3) silty clay loam, brown (7.5YR 4/3) moist, 25% brown (7.5YR 4/2) silty clay loam, dark brown (7.5YR 3/2) moist; moderate medium and coarse prismatic structure parting to moderate medium subangular blocky; very hard; common pressure faces on peds; common fine films and threads of calcium carbonate; strong effervescence; gradual smooth boundary. 332-396 Bk3b2 Brown (7.5YR 5/3) silty clay loam, brown (7.5YR 4/3) to dark brown (7.5YR 4/2) moist; few fine distinct yellowish red (5YR 4/6) mottles; common cracks 3-5 mm wide filled with brown (7.5YR 5/4) silty clay loam, brown (7.5YR 4/4) moist; moderate medium and coarse prismatic structure parting to moderate medium subangular blocky; very hard; common pressure faces on peds; common films and threads of calcium carbonate, especially along root paths; strong effervescence; gradual smooth boundary. 396-457 BCkb2 Brown (7.5YR 5/3) silt loam, brown (7.5YR 4/3) to dark brown (7.5YR 4/2) moist; common fine faint brown (7.5YR 5/4) mottles; weak fine and medium angular blocky structure; very hard; common films and threads of calcium carbonate, especially along root paths; few round pebbles; strong effervescence; abrupt wavy boundary. 457-495 Bkb3 495-560+ C’ “NEVILLE FORMATION” Brown (7.5YR 4/4) silty clay loam, dark brown (7.5YR 3/4) moist; common fine faint brown (7.5YR 5/4) mottles; weak fine and medium prismatic structure parting to weak fine subangular blocky; hard; many films and threads and common fine hard nodules of calcium carbonate (stage II); few round pebbles; strong effervescence; clear smooth boundary. Stratified sand and gravel; single grain; loose; gravels are imbricated. 9 Figure 3. 10 17.6 Buck Hill, a quartz syenite sill, at 2:00. 18.6 First view of the Chisos Mountains, rising high in the background, with the Christmas Mountains in the foreground. 25.3 One of several local bentonite mining companies in the area. The bentonite is mined out of the Pruett Formation. 29.5 Nine-point Mesa, a 300 m thick quartz syenite sill, at 9:00. 31.8 Agua Fria Mountain, a peralkalic rhyolite laccolith, at 2:00. 36.7 Packsaddle Mountain at 3:00. The Christmas Mountains area is characterized by numerous metaluminous to peralkalic, quartz trachyte to rhyolite laccoliths that form domed mountains like Packsaddle, Agua Fria, and Hen Egg Mountains (Henry and others, 1989). Here, the Packsaddle Mountain laccolith has domed back Cretaceous-age Santa Elena Limestone. The Terlingua – Christmas Mountains area was initially studied and mapped my John T. Lonsdale (1940). 38.2 Longhorn Ranch Motel. We will return here at after we complete the stops for Day 1. 41.9 Luna Vista Sill, a peralkalic quartz trachyte with high Na2O (~7.50 wt%) and abundant arfvedsonite (~15 vol%) (Parker and others, 2000). The sill is intruded into shale and siltstone of the Aguja Formation (Upper Cretaceous), which we will discuss at Stop 3. 45.5 Wildhorse Mountain quartz syenite crops out along the east side of the highway. 47.8 Willow Mountain, a quartz syenite intrusion with remarkably welldeveloped columnar jointing. 51.5 Study Butte (“STEW-dee B’yout”), Texas. Junction of FM 170 and SH 118. FM 170 is better known as the “Camino del Rio” and is consistently ranked as one of the most scenic drives in Texas. Traveling west on FM 170, one passes through Terlingua and Lajitas before paralleling the Rio Grande through Big Bend Ranch State Natural Area and on to Presidio. Study Butte, like neighboring Terlingua, was a major center of Cinnabar mining in the early part of the 20th century (Ragsdale, 1976). Continue on SH 118 to Big Bend National Park. 11 53.5 Stop 2. West entrance to Big Bend National Park. Park cars at the entrance sign and prepare for a short hike. Remember that collecting rocks, plants, artifacts, or any other samples without a permit in the park is illegal – Leave your rock hammer in the vehicle! Stop 2. THE TERLINGUA MONOCLINE Richard J. Erdlac, Jr., Department of Geosciences, University of Texas Permian Basin, Odessa. The Terlingua monocline is at least 18 miles in length, with the western 11 miles having an overall strike of N70oW and 5 miles in the middle trending due east. An additional 2 miles trends N65oE through this stop (Figure 4) along Dawson Creek both west and east of U.S. 118. The monocline can be traced eastward to the head of Dawson Creek within the Aguja and underlying Pen Formation. It is highly eroded within the Pen clays and Aguja sandstones. It may extend farther east but is obscured by erosion, intrusives, volcanic rocks, and younger sediments. Figure 4. This image is looking west along the dip slope of Terlingua Monocline in Dawson Creek. This area is just within Big Bend Park boundary. Hogbacks composed of Aguja Sandstone define this eastern part of the monocline. The overall strike of the monocline at this location is N65oE. In the distance the flat horizon is composed of Quaternary gravels that cover the dipping strata that define the monocline. The most distant peaks on the right side of the image represent a small portion of the Terlingua uplift that is named Reed Plateau. The Terlingua monocline as a whole forms the northern boundary of Udden’s ‘Sunken Block’. At this stop (Figure 5) the ridge of the monocline displays a sinusoidal shape along strike (Erdlac, 1988). Beds of Aguja define the monocline 12 with southerly dips between 13o to 57o. Dips within the Aguja Formation are steeper along this ridge than in isolated outcrops of Aguja to the north, or in the Javelina Formation to the south. Cross-bedding is readily observed within the Aguja and paleosols, coincident with the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary, have been extensively investigated within the Javelina and overlying Black Peaks Formation (Lehman, 1990). Small faults locally offset the strike of the monocline (Figure 5). Although structural relief along the monocline has been estimated at over 610 meters (Yates and Thompson, 1959), more recent field mapping (Erdlac, 1988, 1990) suggests structural relief of 460 meters or less. The monocline is cored by a high-angle reverse and strike-slip fault (north-side-up) (Erdlac, 1988, 1990). Small out-of-the-syncline reverse or thrust faults are also present in this segment and along other parts of the Terlingua monocline. Figure 5. The Chisos Mountains form the backdrop for this image looking east along the dip slope of the Terlingua Monocline in Dawson Creek. This area is just within Big Bend Park boundary, with the location for this photo west of the actual Stop 2. Hogbacks composed of Aguja Sandstone also define this part of the monocline. The monocline turns from about N90oE to N65oE in trend. This image was taken looking east along the N90oE segment of the monocline. A notch (right of center) along the monocline offsets the Aguja ridge by 30 to 37 meters of left separation. No slickensides were found; thus this offset could have a vertical component as well. Westward, the Terlingua monocline forms the southern boundary of the Terlingua uplift, a rhombic-shaped push-up feature that is both structurally and topographically high (Erdlac, 1990). The monocline is here composed of steeply dipping Santa Elena, Del Rio, Buda, and Boquillas Formations. Dip along this part of the Terlingua monocline has increased, and ranges from 48o to 83o south. This steep dip is especially evident in the area of Tres Cuevas Mountain (Figure 6). Croesus Canyon, which cuts through the monocline at this location from 13 north to south, provides the only access into the core of the monocline that well displays the faults that control the location of the monocline. These faults display slickenlines that demonstrate both the strike-slip and reverse-slip movement involved with the formation of the monocline. Figure 6. View east along steeply dipping Santa Elena Limestone from near the crest of Tres Cuevas Mountain, the highest point along the Terlingua monocline. The Buda and Del Rio Formations are low on the flank of the monocline. The Buda forms the series of hogbacks along the right center part of the image. The Del Rio is located within the topographic low between the Buda and the Santa Elena. The area within the foreground and background of this image is cut by a deep canyon (Croesus Canyon) that cuts through the monocline. The area in shadow on the left central side of the image shows the eastern wall of this canyon. Beyond its structural and tectonic importance to the region, the Terlingua monocline and was the source of the second largest cinnabar deposits within the continental United States (Yates and Thompson, 1959; Ragsdale, 1976). Cinnabar was recovered from northeast-trending fractures and faults along the crest of the monocline. The Del Rio appeared to form a prominent seal for cinnabar emplacement. While local deposits of cinnabar are associated with local intrusions, the greatest amount of cinnabar was recovered from mines associated with the deep faulting controlling the placement of the monocline. The deepest mine was the Chisos Mine at Terlingua, which reached depths of 840 feet. The owner of this mine, Howard Perry, would only allow Johan Udden into the mine because Udden was able to understand the geological relations involving cinnabar emplacement (Ragsdale, 1976). He was able to show the miners where to dig in order to keep out of water wet fractures. 14 Upon returning to your vehicles, reset your odometer to 0.0. 0.0 Entrance to Big Bend National Park 1.0 Just past the Fee Station, turn right on to Old Maverick Road, an improved dirt road. OLD MAVERICK ROAD Thomas M. Lehman, Department of Geosciences, Texas Tech University, Lubbock. The Old Maverick Road extends from the entrance station at the west end of Big Bend Park, southwestward to the mouth of Santa Elena Canyon on the Rio Grande. The road descends from the gravel-covered surface of a Quaternary pediment onto exposures of the Upper Cretaceous Pen and Aguja Formations, generally following the drainage of Alamo Creek, a tributary of the Rio Grande. The higher peaks visible along the route of the Old Maverick Road (e.g., Rattlesnake Mountain, Pena Mountain) are capped by middle Tertiary sills that have intruded the Upper Cretaceous strata. The best exposures of the Upper Cretaceous strata are found around the margins of the intrusions. 2.2 Tule Mountain at 9:00 is capped by the Tule Mountain Trachyandesite of the Chisos Group. 7.1 Chimneys Trailhead West. Peña Mountain at 12:00. 7.4 Luna’s Jacal 8.6 Stop 3. Pull completely off the road! Stop 3. PEN AND AGUJA FORMATIONS Thomas M. Lehman, Department of Geosciences, Texas Tech University, Lubbock. A Review of Late Cretaceous Sedimentation in the Big Bend region Upper Cretaceous sedimentary rocks in the Big Bend region comprise a northeastwardly thinning wedge of marine, paralic, and continental strata. Exposures of these strata to the west and northwest in Chihuahua and in Presidio County, are assigned to the Ojinaga, San Carlos, and El Picacho Formations. Correlative strata in Big Bend, and in nearby Coahuila, are referred to the Boquillas, Pen, Aguja, and Javelina Formations (Lehman, 1985). Throughout Late Cretaceous time, a subduction zone existed along the west coast of Mexico, with accretionary melange and flysch accumulating in an offshore trench complex and forearc basin in what is now Baja California. 15 Figure 7. Correlation of Upper Cretaceous sedimentary rocks in Trans-Pecos Texas and adjacent Mexico (from Lehman, 1986). Magmatism in Sonora during Late Cretaceous time formed an extensive subduction-related volcanic arc in the Sierra Madre Occidental. This volcanic highland created the primary source terrain for much of the Late Cretaceous sedimentation in the Big Bend region, as well as in the Parras and La Popa basins along the Gulf Coast in Mexico. The continental basement upon which the volcanic arc was built, was separated from the Big Bend region throughout most of Cretaceous time by a subsiding deep-water marine basin - the Chihuahua Trough. A shallow-water carbonate platform - the Coahuila Platform existed northeast of the Chihuahua Trough and formed the basement of the Big Bend region. Subsidence of the Chihuahua Trough continued to exert a strong influence on sedimentation well into Santonian time. Pelagic open marine limestone of the Boquillas Formation accumulated on the platform while deep marine black shale of the Ojinaga Formation accumulated in the adjacent trough. As the Chihuahua Trough filled, and subsidence relative to the Coahuila Platform slowed, clastic sediment gradually inundated the platform, and during Campanian time the shoreline prograded northeastwardly across the Big Bend region. Fluvial-dominated deltaic, sandy strandplain, coastal marsh, and swamp deposits accumulated at that time to form the lower parts of the San Carlos and Aguja Formations. The strandline reached a point near the present SantiagoSierra del Carmen range by Early Campanian time. 16 Figure 8. Late Cretaceous paleoenvironmental reconstructions of the Big Bend region (modified from Lehman, 1985); A) Cenomanian through Santonian time, showing deposition of Ojinaga Formation (Ko) in the Chihuahua Trough and Boquillas Formation (Kb) on the Coahuila Platform, B) early Campanian time, showing coastal progradation during deposition of the basal sandstone and lower shale of the Aguja Formation (Kag); C) middle Campanian time, showing transgressive deposition of the Rattlesnake Mt and McKinney Springs members; D) Maastrichtian time, showing deposition of the Javelina Formation during onset of Laramide tectonism and formation of the Tornillo Basin. 17 Renewed marine transgression is recorded by an extensive tongue of marine shale within the middle part of both the San Carlos and Aguja Formations. Ammonites, oysters, and inoceramid bivalves from these deposits indicate that this transgression occurred in Middle Campanian time. Sedimentation occurred in sandy shoals, barrier islands, and coastal estuaries that formed during this transgression. Southwestward thinning of the marine shale tongue within the Aguja Formation indicates that the Middle Campanian transgression did not extend inland much further than the present eastern margin of the Chihuahua Tectonic Belt. During Late Campanian time, the strandline once again prograded northeastwardly across the Big Bend region, depositing the upper parts of the San Carlos and Aguja Formations. With the onset of Laramide tectonism in Maastrichtian time, a dramatic change in sedimentation occurred in the Big Bend region, a change recorded by the presence of coarse extra-basinal detritus in the sediments, and a shift to southeastward paleocurrent orientation in the El Picacho and Javelina Formations. These strata of latest Cretaceous age are entirely fluvial in origin. To the west of the Big Bend region, strata within the Chihuahua Trough were folded and thrust eastward along the edge of the Coahuila Platform, as they moved along a decollement surface initiated within evaporites deep in the basin. This deformation culminated in formation of the Chihuahua Tectonic Belt - a southern extension of the Rocky Mountain Cordilleran Fold and Thrust Belt. To the east of the Big Bend region, a west-facing thrusted monoclinal uplift was initiated along the present site of the Del Norte - Santiago - del Carmen range, a feature similar to the classical Laramide basement-cored uplifts of the central Rocky Mountains. During Maastrichtian and subsequent Paleogene time, sedimentation was largely restricted to the area (the "Tornillo Basin") between these two deformed regions (Lehman, 1991). Local Upper Cretaceous Stratigraphy The Pen and Aguja Formations weather recessively to form badlands flanking the intermittent stream valleys and surrounding the eroded intrusive rocks in the Alamo Creek and Terlingua Creek drainages. These strata are exposed in a broad southeast-plunging anticline offset by a series of parallel normal faults (generally down to the northeast) that comprise the Terlingua Abaja Fault Group of Maxwell and others (1967). The Upper Cretaceous strata comprise an intertonguing series of marine shales, deltaic sandstones, and continental mudstones (Figure 8). Exposures along the flank of Rattlesnake Mountain were designated the type area for what Udden (1907) called the "Rattlesnake Beds". Adkins (1933) later renamed these beds the Aguja Formation (Udden's term was already in use elsewhere) and established the type area at Sierra Aguja ("needle peak") about 4 miles to the southwest. Lehman (1985) later subdivided the Aguja Formation into several informal members that reflect the intertonguing lithologies. 18 The broad flat area traversed by the Old Maverick Road is underlain primarily by smectitic marine shales of the Pen Formation. These strata are subject to dramatic shrink-and-swell action, resulting in "popcorn" weathering, and a deep yellow limonitic weathering zone with surficial gypsum crystal crusts due to decomposition of interstitial pyrite. The sediments contain biostromes of the oyster Exogyra and rudist Durania, and scattered ammonites. The Pen Figure 9. Stratigraphic relationships of members of the Aguja Formation and Pen Formation in Big Bend National Park. Formation is about 200 m thick in this area, and ranges from late Santonian to early Campanian in age. Thin sandstones in the top of the Pen Formation contain storm-generated shell beds with a diverse shallow marine molluscan fauna dominated by bivalves and gastropods. The Aguja Formation records two progradational cycles, the lower of which is present only in the western part of the Big Bend region. The basal sandstone member (10 m thick) is a progradational shoreface and deltaic sandstone containing ammonites and inoceramid bivalves of late early Campanian age. It is overlain by the lower shale member (70 m thick) which consists of interbedded carbonaceous shale and lignite that accumulated in coastal marshes and swamps landward of the shoreline (Record and Lehman, 1989). The lignitic shales are mined locally and sporadically as a source of soilconditioning "humates". In places, thin seams of bituminous-grade coal are found that have also been mined, particularly in areas adjacent to the intrusive rocks. The lower shale member is overlain by a highly fossiliferous transgressive marine sandstone - the Rattlesnake Mountain sandstone member of the Aguja (Macon, 1994). This unit (10 m thick) contains abundant oysters (Flemingostrea and Crassostrea) as well as inoceramids and ammonites indicative of middle 19 Campanian age. Shark teeth are also common in this deposit. Recently, the remains of a gigantic sea turtle were also recovered from this unit. A thin marine shale overlies the Rattlesnake Mountain sandstone. This marine shale thickens eastward where it is referred to as the McKinney Springs tongue of the Pen Formation (Mosley, 1992). Exposures along the Old Maverick Road are near the landward pinchout of this shale, and it is here very thin (12 m) and lignitic, suggesting accumulation in a lagoonal setting. Overlying the McKinney Springs marine shale tongue is the Terlingua Creek sandstone member, the second progradational deltaic/shoreface sandstone of the Aguja. This unit is extensive over the entire Big Bend region, and thickens dramatically (up to 30 m) in proximity to major deltaic distributary channel complexes. It is relatively thin (8 m) in interdistributary areas. Paleocurrent data indicate that the deltas which deposited the Terlingua Creek sandstone prograded northeastwardly across the Big Bend region. The paleoshoreline trended roughly northwest to southeast. The Terlingua Creek sandstone is overlain by the upper shale member of the Aguja, which was deposited primarily in fluvial coastal plain environments. The upper shale member approaches 200 m in thickness in exposures along the Old Maverick Road, but thins dramatically to the northeast, where it is typically less than 100 m thick. Most of the terrestrial vertebrate fauna of the Aguja Formation has been collected from sites in the upper shale member, and indicates a Late Campanian to Early Maastrichtian age for this part of the formation. The hadrosaurian ("duck-billed") dinosaur Kritosaurus and ceratopsian ("horned") dinosaur Chasmosaurus dominate the fauna (Davies and Lehman, 1989; Lehman, 1989; Wagner and Lehman, 2001). A variety of other dinosaurs, including tyrannosaurids, ankylosaurs ("armored" dinosaurs), pachycephalosaurs ("dome-headed" dinosaurs), ornithomimids ("ostrich" dinosaurs) have also been found (Rowe and others, 1992; Lehman, 1997, 2001). The giant crocodile Deinosuchus was also a prominent member of this fauna (e.g., Anglen and Lehman, 2000), which inhabited open marsh habitats in what was otherwise a closed-canopy tropical evergreen forest (Wheeler and Lehman, 2000; Lehman and Wheeler, 2001). Note: A geologic map of the Old Maverick Road area, between Pena Mt and Rattlesnake Mt, showing exposures of the Pen and Aguja Formations (from Lehman, 1985) is included as an appendix. 13.5 The end of Old Maverick Road. Turn right (west) on the paved road (Ross Maxwell Scenic Drive). 14.1 Stop 4. Santa Elena Canyon (Figure 9). Park your vehicle at the cul-desac parking lot and prepare for a very short walk to the mouth of Santa Elena Canyon and the Terlingua Creek Delta. From the Santa Elena Canyon parking lot, we return the way we came, traveling east on Ross Maxwell Scenic Drive. 20 15.0 Santa Elena Canyon overlook. 16.2 Santa Elena Canyon take-out on right. 22.0 Cottonwood Campground on right. Figure 10. Santa Elena Canyon. Strata from bottom to top are: Ktc, Telephone Canyon Formation; Kdc, Del Carmen Limestone; Ksp, Sue Peaks Formation; Kse, Santa Elena Limestone. Stop 4. TERLINGUA CREEK DELTA Kevin Urbanczyk, Department of Earth and Physical Sciences, Sul Ross State University, Alpine, Texas. We have conducted periodic surveys of the confluence of Terlingua creek and the Rio Grande. The point of this work has been to get undergraduate students involved in field research, and to document the characteristics of the creek-river confluence. This is particularly interesting considering the chronic low flow of the Rio Grande associated with drought in the 1990’s and early 2000’s and increased upstream diversion. The initial survey work was completed on 4-3-99 with the help of students from the Introductory Geology (1401), Geology of West Texas (3301) and Historical Geology (1402) classes from SRSU with supervision by Dr. Kevin Urbanczyk and Dr. Jim Whitford-Stark. 21 The work consisted of setting up a TOPCON laser theodolite on a limestone outcrop along the trail into Santa Elena canyon. The site was chosen as to provide moderately easy accessibility and a clear view of most of the creek channel (Figure 11). After the instrument was set up, two students with portable radios and reflecting prisms were sent to numerous locations to survey the river edge, the most recent creek channel locations and various vegetation sites. One student was required to assist Dr. Urbanczyk at the instrument to take careful field notes. Approximately 150 points were shot during a 3 hour period. Figure 11. Terlingua Creek survey crew with the terrace and delta in front view. Since 1990, the east margin of the Terlingua creek channel has moved eastward about 40 meters at the expense of a terrace that had been covered by vegetation. The west margin has also moved eastward about the same distance, with the development of a new terrace covered with vegetation. Figure 11 shows this terrace in front of the survey crew. Compare the vegetation seen below the instrument in Figure 10 to the west side of the creek on DOQ shown in Figure 12. Additionally, the creek flooding has pushed the margin of the Rio Grande southward, and significantly narrowed its channel (see Figure 12). The amount of Terlingua creek sediment along the northern banks of the Rio Grande indicate that the most recent flooding occurred in creek, not in the Rio Grande. 22.6 Castolon village and store. LUNCH STOP. 23.7 Cerro Castellan (Figure 13) at 12:00. Cerro Castellan, like Horseshoe Canyon (Stop 5) is a volcanic dome and one of several vents for the Wasp Springs Formation and Burro Mesa Rhyolite. 22 25.2 Western end of the River Road. 25.4 Tuff Canyon. Vehicles will need to park here for the next stop after drivers drop off passengers ~0.9 miles down the road. Figure 12. 1990 DOQ of the Terlingua Creek delta with the results of the 1999 survey superimposed (lower image). The green dot in the upper image shows the location of the theodolite. 23 Figure 13. Cerro Castellan. Tcbm, Bee Mountain Basalt; Tcu, Chisos undifferentiated; Tws, Wasp Springs Member; Tbmr, Burro Mesa Rhyolite. 26.3 Drop-off point for Stop 5. Drivers will need to drop off passengers here, turn around, and park at Tuff Canyon (Mile 27.3). We will shuttle drivers from Tuff Canyon back up to this point. Stop 5. HORSESHOE CANYON VOLCANIC DOME Don F. Parker, Department of Geology, Baylor University, Waco, Texas. The surge deposits and nonwelded pyroclastic flows so excellently displayed in the walls of Tuff Canyon suggest a nearby source (see previous stop, this guidebook; Barker, 2000; Parker and others, 2000). Many of these pyroclastic flows were erupted from the Horseshoe Canyon volcanic dome, the focus of this stop (Figure 14). Horseshoe Canyon Dome is one of a half dozen or so identified vent areas for Burro Mesa Rhyolite lava located along Ross Maxwell Drive in a 16 km-long belt (Figure 15) (Henry and others, 1989; Holt, 1998). Other eruptive vents are located along Burro Mesa (three or four vents), Kit Mountain, Goat Mountain, and Cerro Castellan. Undoubtedly, others will be discovered. The name Burro Mesa Rhyolite was first used by Maxwell and others (1967), who correlated outcrops in the High Chisos Mountains with exposures along Burro Mesa. I utilize the term “Burro Mesa Rhyolite” in a limited 24 sense in applying it to rocks of similar mineralogy, chemistry and age (~29 Ma; Copeland and others, 1992) in the Cerro Castellan quadrangle and surrounding areas. Figure 14. View of Horseshoe Canyon Dome from Tuff Canyon parking lot. The rhyolite dome is visible behind the eroded tuff ring. Burro Mesa Rhyolite, in the strict sense, occurs in two principal types in the Ross Maxwell Drive belt: sparsely-porphyritic rhyolite and abundantlyporphyritic rhyolite (Becker, 1976; Holt, 1998). The abundantly porphyritic rhyolite appears to be limited to several vents located along Burro Mesa, where it overlies sparsely-porphyritic rhyolite (Henry and others, 1989; Holt, 1998). The upper member may have been derived from the lower member by about 15 weight percent fractionation of the observed phenocrysts, mostly anorthoclase alkali feldspar. Rare mafic enclaves of trachyte found locally in the sparselyporphyritic rhyolite suggest that less evolved magma occurred deeper within the magmatic system. Each Burro Mesa vent was characterized by initial exposive eruptions that formed a low-angle cone of non-welded surge deposits interbedded with nonwelded pyroclastic flow deposits. Lava, erupted from feeder dikes, then erupted and may be observed at several centers where it cut upward through the underlying pyroclastic cone (cf. Cerro Castellan; Burro Mesa Pouroff). Locally, underlying pyroclastic rocks were welded from heat of the overlying lava. 25 Northwest Entrance, Horseshoe Canyon. The Horseshoe Canyon area exposes an approximately 1.6 km diameter volcanic dome and its associated, more extensive tuff cone (Figures 16 and 17). Figure 15. Outcrop map of Burro Mesa Rhyolite along Ross Maxwell Drive. After Holt (1998). Our Stop begins along Maxwell Drive near milepost 19. We will hike southeast about 2000 feet to the northwest entrance to Horseshoe Canyon while our drivers return the vehicles to the Tuff Canyon parking area (there is no parking available where we must leave the highway). At the entrance to the canyon, non-welded surge and normal pyroclastic flows are overlain by a toe of Burro Mesa lava (Figure 18). The immediate section of pyroclastic rocks beneath the lava consists a basal pyroclastic flow, overlain by at least three sets of surge deposits (Figures 19 and 20), which are in turn overlain by five non-welded pumice-rich pyroclastic flows (each flow 1 meter or less in thickness), about 1 meter of pink surge deposits, and finally the brecciated base of the lava proper (Figure 21). A steep exposure of cone deposits on the north side of the canyon 26 entrance appears to contain debris flow deposits with angular blocks of trachyte up to 1 meter in diameter. Figure 16. Geologic map of Horseshoe Canyon area. Stop begins as indicated along Ross Maxwell Drive. Units keyed same as Figure 15, except Tbmdt = Burro Mesa “Dam” Tuff and Qal = alluvium. Figure 17. Cross section A-A’ from Figure 16. Tml = Mafic lava unit; Tt = Tuff Cone; Tbml = Burro Mesa Rhyolite lava; Tg = older gravels. The lava itself is nearly horizontal near the entrance to the canyon, but steepens to the southeast. Flow banding is contorted although nearly parallel to 27 the base at the bottom of the flow, and steepens upwards into ramp structures (Figure 22). Not visible at the stop, a brecciated zone occurs near the “U” of Horseshoe Canyon, and appears to occupy a crevice-like zone extending vertically through the unit. The north side of the canyon exhibits large, concentric joints that parallel the front of the lava dome (Figure 23). Figure 18. Base of Burro Mesa lava and underlying non-welded pyroclastic deposits, west side of northwest entrance to Horseshoe Canyon. Figure 19. Detail of surge sets from Figure 18. 28 Figure 20. Detail of pumice lapilli from non-welded pyroclastic flows. Knife is 8 cm long. Figure 21. Brecciated base of Burro Mesa lava. Same locality as Figures 18, 19, and 20. Cactus is 1 m high. 29 Figure 22. Large ramp structure in Burro Mesa lava at bend of Horseshoe Canyon. Figure 23. Concentric joints parallel to dome front, east side of northwest entrance to Horseshoe Canyon. Joints cut flow banding. Note ramps in upper lava. 30 The vent area for the lava is not precisely located, but appears to have been about 1000 feet (~300 m) south of the northwest entrance to Horseshoe Canyon, judging from strike and dip of foliation in the lava (Figure 16). The exposed feeder dike for the Cerro Castellan dome is only a few meters thick; a similar presumed feeder dike for an abundantly-porphyritic dome and flow on the northwest end of Burro Mesa is also very thin. These data suggest that a feeder for Horseshoe Canyon might be very small in relation to the size of the dome. The Southwestern Flank Although we will not have time to visit it on this trip, the southwestern flank of Horseshoe Dome exposes some important relationships (Figure 16). Normal faulting formed a graben extending northwest through the map area, downdropping Tertiary gravels and isolating a segment of the dome. In this segment, a thin edge of lava is overlain by densely-welded ignimbrite (Figures 24 and 25). The ignimbrite is about 10 meters thick and appears to be of Burro Mesa lithology, although detailed study has not been completed. Southwest of the map area, the ignimbrite forms a small mesa, but, beyond that, its areal distribution and source are unknown at present. I have informally named this unit the “dam tuff,” from exposures along an eroded dam southwest of the mapped area. Figure 24. Southwest flank of Horseshoe Dome. Densely-welded ignimbrite overlies Burro Mesa lava with ramp structures The western part of the mapped area is underlain by exposures of the eroded tuff cone, which consists mostly of surge deposits and non-welded pyroclastic flows containing lithic blocks up to 1 meter diameter (mostly of mafic trachyte). The cone unit (Tt on Figure 16) overlies mafic trachyte lava (Tml) that was mapped by Maxwell and others (1967) as Bee Mountain Basalt, and appears to be similar to the mafic lava exposed in Tuff Canyon. The mafic 31 trachyte has been faulted against the Tt cone unit and the ignimbrite by a normal fault with about 40 meters of vertical displacement (Figure 16). Figure 25. Detail of densely-welded ignimbrite with lithic inclusions of scoriaceous mafic trachyte Suggested Work and Recommendations The four field days spent mapping this small area reveal how much remains to be discovered regarding the Cerro Castellan quadrangle and has raised as many questions as it has answered. The eruptive center of Horseshoe Dome appears documented, but where was the source of the Dam tuff? Also: Maxwell’s mapping shows extensive Burro Mesa southeast of the map area. Is this more lava from Horseshoe, another dome, or more ignimbrite? What are the chemical and petrographic characteristics of the ignimbrite, and what is its relation, if any, to the Burro Mesa lava? Obviously, more mapping and petrologic study are warranted. In regard to park development, a trail might be developed into Horseshoe Canyon and related to the already-developed Tuff Canyon area. As such it would complete the volcanological story already begun at Tuff Canyon, and illustrated in the beautiful exposure of a similar vent at Cerro Castellan. 32 Stop 6. TUFF CANYON Dan S. Barker, Department of Geological Sciences, the University of Texas at Austin. [A geologic map, sections, and photographs are in a guidebook for nongeologists visiting Tuff Cayon (Barker, 2000)]. At this stop, we see distal pyroclastic deposits from the Horseshoe Canyon vent area (the previous stop) and a more complete section of the underlying mafic lava. The intermittent stream of Blue Creek comes down from the western flank of the Chisos Mountains and eventually enters the Rio Grande. Apparently abandoning the segment of its old course through Horseshoe Canyon, Blue Creek has vigorously incised Tuff Canyon, which is visible to the north from the parking area. The most obvious feature in this first view is a cross-canyon striking NNW. Its western wall is a fault-line scarp parallel to a normal fault (down to the east). The National Park Service has masterfully located three observation platforms on the rim of Tuff Canyon. First we will walk to the easternmost platform, across a gravel-armored surface.that impedes lateral growth of the canyon. Looking down from this observation platform, the farthest one upstream, we can see a smoothly stripped dark surface on lava. This surface begins to show more relief a little farther downstream. The lava is probably part of the Bee Mountain “Basalt”, a 34.5 Ma package of flows with varied compositions. Overlying the dark lava and forming the dry waterfall visible upstream are paler layers of 29 Ma pyroclastic deposits that were likely erupted from the vent(s?) at the previous stop. Note, in the top surface of the dark lava, a network of light-colored cracks. Some of these, at least, appear to be polygonal cooling joints that became filled with pyroclastic debris that fell on the already weathered lava surface. Now we retrace our steps, then past the parking area, and take the short trail to the mouth of Tuff Canyon. Once inside the canyon, we will walk upstream as far as the lava to examine its features, then turn around and walk downstream but upsection, thanks to the westerly dip of the pyroclastic units and their repetition by normal faults. Below the observation platform we just visited, the dark lava forms a riser and step in the canyon floor. A 10-meter section of lava has been brought up on the eastern block of a normal fault. Among features visible here are a large block with a pahoehoe surface and stretched vesicles, and some not entirely convincing lava pillows. The pillows are just above the contact between lava and the underlying hyaloclastite (“broken glass rock”). The hyaloclastite is a matrix-supported breccia containing dark clasts of chilled lava in a lighter colored matrix of clay, carbonate, and zeolites. It is the product of thermal spalling and steam explosions generated when lava entered standing water or water-saturated sediment. Perhaps the water had been ponded by another lava flow. The pillows formed as lobes of lava were quenched to thin glassy skins enclosing liquid lava. The upper, 33 massive, lava had less opportunity to interact with water because the depositional surface had been built up by earlier lava. Here in one small part of Big Bend we can see the two most common volcanic features on Earth; hyaloclastites and lava flows cover most of the ocean floor. Proceeding downstream we can get close views of the pyroclastic units in the canyon walls. First, note that Tuff Canyon is misnamed for two reasons. The deposits are not lithified, and are dominated by pumice lapilli (pea-sized fragments of frothy rhyolite). “Tuff” refers to finer-grained and consolidated deposits, but it is too late to change the Park signs. Also note that the pumice fragments have a “woody” texture caused by elongated vesicles. If the elongation had been caused by extrusion through a narrow opening, each vesicle should have an oval cross section. These have circular sections, giving rise to an interpretation (not believed by all volcanologists) that such tubular pumice forms by enormous accelerations during eruption, literally pulling the froth like taffy. Some of the pyroclastic units show faint stratification (mostly by particle-size variations), but also contain blocks of the dark lava. Certainly the lava blocks and the pumice lapilli were far from being hydrologic equivalents, and could not have been deposited from the same current in running water. Instead, these weakly bedded units are interpreted as deposits from pyroclastic surges, turbulent clouds of solid particles suspended in gas. These surges moved along the ground surface at high velocities. Locally, you can also see ballistic blocks of the mafic lava, with impact sags where the falling blocks deformed the underlying layers. The blocks of long-cold lava were probably thrown from a vent by phreatic explosions when rhyolitic magma encountered groundwater. Although no statistical study has been done, the size range of the blocks suggests that the vent was less than 1 km away, and the asymmetry of the impact sags indicates that the ballistic blocks came in from the east or northeast. Some of the lava chunks are rounded (by weathering?) but are still called blocks, not bombs. The term “bomb” implies that lava was still partially molten when it was blown out. Other pyroclastic units are more massive beds with tops defined by coarser pumice. These are pyroclastic flow deposits, carried in by gas clouds with higher concentrations of particles than surges, and probably dominated by laminar flow. In contrast to the pyroclastic deposits around the vent at the previous stop, these are not welded, apparently because they had lost heat and were also thinner here. Some pyroclastic flow units are cut by vertical gas-escape pipes. The ascending gas removed finer particles from the pipes, leaving them loosely filled with a coarser lag concentrate. In places, pipes cut upward through more than one flow unit, demonstrating that the upper unit was deposited when the lower unit was still losing its gases. Deposition of the pyroclastic units may have taken only hours or days. East-west channels filled by debris flow deposits locally interrupt the pyroclastic section. As you walk back toward the canyon mouth, note the 34 “draperies” on the upper canyon walls. These are examples of case hardening, where silica was dissolved from glass in the pumice and then redeposit when water evaporated. Case hardening is probably a factor in the preservation of potholes in the canyon walls. 27.3 Leave Tuff Canyon. 31.6 Mule Ears Overlook. The Mule Ears are intrusions of peralkalic rhyolite. 32.3 Goat Mountain (Figure 26). Like Horseshoe canyon and Cerro Castellan, Goat Mountain is a vent area for the Burro Mesa Rhyolite. This interpretation of Goat Mountain represents a very good example of “What we’ve learned since Maxwell and others (1967)”: the exhibit for Goat Mountain gives Maxwell and other’s interpretation—that this mountain represents a pale valley cut into older Chisos units, which was then filled by an eruption of Wasp Spring “Flow-Breccia” from the Pine Canyon volcanic center that was then incised into another valley, which was filled by flows of Burro Mesa Rhyolite that also erupted from the Pine Canyon center. Figure 26. Goat Mountain volcanic dome. 34.0 Kit Mountain, another Burro Mesa Rhyolite vent area, at 9:00. 34.3 Eastern trailhead for the Chimneys Trail. The Chimneys are the eroded remnants of Wasp Spring surge deposits erupted from the Kit Mountain vent (Holt, 1998). 35.5 Burro Mesa Junction. Burro Mesa (Figure 27) is the type locality for Burro Mesa Rhyolite. At least three vents areas for the Burro Mesa Rhyolite have been identified in this area (Holt, 1998). 35 Figure 27. Burro Mesa volcanic dome. 38.7 Sotol Vista Overlook. Turn Right. 39.1 Sotol Vista parking lot. Stop 7. SOTOL VISTA Stop 7a. THE SIERRA QUEMADA CALDERA Tim W. Duex and Gary L. Kinsland, Department of Geology, University of Louisiana, Lafayette. Looking southeast from Sotol Vista, many of the hilltops seen on the skyline are related to the Sierra Quemada Caldera although it is difficult to delineate a straightforward relationship because of the complex nature of the caldera, the effect of Basin-and Range faulting, and differential erosion. Many other topographic features in the area contain the eruptive products of the caldera, most notably the Mule Ear Spring Tuff Member of the Chisos Formation. The caldera is located about 4 mi (6 km) southeast of Sotol Vista and about 2 mi (3 km) south of the South Rim of the High Chisos Mountains (Figures 28 and 29). The Sierra Quemada is a significant event in the volcanic history of Big Bend National Park because it produced a variety of igneous materials including the oldest major felsic activity in the region. The materials will be discussed as those that formed before, after, or during, collapse of the caldera. 36 Figure 28. Location of the Sierra Quemada Caldera and related features (modified from Henry and Price, 1986). 37 Figure 29. View of the Sierra Quemada from the South Rim. Rocks that were formed prior to caldera collapse include minor lava flows in and near the caldera, tuffaceous material below the Mule Ear Spring Tuff, and dikes found north and west of the caldera including those that can be seen along Ross Maxwell Scenic Drive. The tuffaceous rocks can be at least as thick as the Mule Ear Spring Tuff in places and are generally less-resistant, gently-sloping outcrops above the Bee Mountain Basalt or below the Tule Mountain Trachyandesite. Post-caldera activity includes the crudely-concentric ring fracture and resurgent intrusions and related dikes as well as minor extrusive materials. Dikes that extend northeast of the caldera appear to be related to this stage of activity. The most-widespread unit erupted from the Sierra Quemada Caldera, and perhaps the most widespread volcanic unit in the park, is the Mule Ear Spring Tuff which has been dated by others at about 34 Ma. It is thickest inside the caldera where it exceeds 130 m (400 ft) and has clasts in excess of 10 m (33 ft). Outside the caldera it thins away from the caldera margins from a maximum of about 47 m (155 ft), through many areas with thicknesses around 25 m (80 ft), to a more typical value of 6 m (20 ft). It can be seen in almost all of the areas mapped as the Mule Ear Spring Tuff by Maxwell and others (1967), such as on Goat and Kit Mountains, and also in a number of areas mapped as “Undifferentiated Lavas” or other units. Most notably, it is thickest on the hill about a mile northeast of Sotol Vista where it is present as three distinct layers that are ash-flow tuffs, and on the smaller, rounded hill across Blue Creek canyon about a half mile to the east-southeast. 38 Figure 30. This approximately 4.5 mi long total magnetic intensity profile starts at A south of the caldera and runs about N – S up the Smoky Creek pack trail, to the Dodson Trail, East along the Dodson Trail about one mile and then SE up hills within the caldera. The increase in signal from A – B is the result of approaching the deep intrusive masses of the caldera. Between B and C the trail is within a narrow canyon cut into the ring-fracture-intrusion and the data show the short wavelength/high amplitude characteristics of the caldera intrusives. The trail from C to D crosses the complexly faulted (caldera collapse) lower portion of the interior of the caldera, which itself is down faulted along a Basin and Range fault from the upper portion at D. At D the intensity increases sharply as the trail crosses to the relatively uplifted upper portion of the caldera, this increase is probably indicative of the decreased depth to the buried intrusive masses of the upper portion of the caldera. In the stretch D – E the transect crosses a few dikes and climbs to the intersection with the Dodson Trail (near E). The drop in average intensity before E may be the result of the trail climbing away from the buried intrusives. From E to F the path is mostly within caldera collapse debris and younger (reworked) sediments. The relatively constant data are consistent with this geology with the exception of two major excursions where dikes are crossed. We have more than 80 miles of such profiles over and around the caldera. Stop 7b. TERLINGUA UPLIFT OVERVIEW Richard J. Erdlac, Jr., Department of Geosciences, University of Texas Permian Basin, Odessa, Texas. The Terlingua monocline forms the southern boundary of a much larger structural feature called the Terlingua uplift (Figure 31). The uplift is roughly rhombic in shape and is both structurally and topographically high (Erdlac, 1990). This feature extends 29 km north-northwest and 23 km in maximum width. The uplift is bounded to the west by the Fresno monocline that joins with the Terlingua monocline at the southwest corner of the uplift (Figures 31 and 32). The Fresno monocline strikes northwest into the southwestern edge of the Solitario, which lies within the northwestern part of the uplift. It overprints and obscures any northwesterly continuation of the Fresno monocline. Eastern and northern boundaries of the uplift are more obscure. Cretaceous rocks dip gently (less than 25o) northeast off the northeast flank and are cut by a series of 39 northwest-striking Basin and Range faults. The northern uplift boundary may coincide with the Tascotal Mesa fault and is largely buried by Tertiary strata. Figure 31. This Landsat image shows the Terlingua uplift (circled area) within the context of numerous other features within the Big Bend region, both within Texas and Mexico. For example the dark area to the west represents the Bofecillos Mountains. To the south in Mexico lie the San Carlos and Sierra Rica caldera complex. The southeastern edge of the image displays reddish rocks that comprise the Chisos Mountains. Finally, the small dark circular areas with the central part of the image represent numerous igneous intrusives found in the region. Lower to Upper Cretaceous rocks crop out across the uplift. Santa Elena Limestone is exposed over much of the uplift, whereas Del Rio Clay through uppermost Cretaceous strata (Javelina Formation) crop out along the flanks or are preserved locally in collapse structures or on the down-thrown side of faults on the uplift. The Terlingua uplift originated as a Laramide push-up structure (Erdlac, 1988, 1990; Erdlac and Erdlac, 1992) that predated the Tertiary intrusion and volcanic activity that formed the Solitario. Physiographically, the uplift is divisible into a southern half that displays numerous northeast- and northwest-striking faults and a northern half upon which the Solitario is superposed. This superposition was first noted by Baker (1934) when he stated that the Solitario rests on and merges into a broad northwest-trending anticline, the Terlingua uplift. Field evidence for Laramide deformation on the southern half of the uplift consists of folds, faults (strike-slip, thrust, and contraction), tectonic stylolites, and various stratigraphic relationships (Erdlac, 1990, 1994). The faults that cut across the southern part of the Terlingua uplift are highly orthogonal in nature (Figure 32). Many of these faults display both strike-slip as 40 well as dip-slip movement. The northeast-trending faults are interpreted as Laramide in age whereas the northwest-trending faults are of Basin and Range age. As the northeast-trending faults intersect the Terlingua monocline along the southern edge of the uplift, the monocline displays a noticeable left-stepping en echelon pattern in its strike (Figure 32). Figure 32. This Landsat image shows the extent of the Terlingua uplift push-up structure. It lies in the central and western (left) part of the image. This rhombic-shaped feature is bounded on the south by the Terlingua uplift. The circular Solitario lies astride the uplift along its northwestern portion. The Fresno monocline forms the western boundary of the feature, and is itself overlain by the western edge of the Solitario. The darker areas along the northeastern, southeastern, and western edge of the image represent volcanics and intrusive rocks. The very northern part of Mesa de Anguila lies along the southcentral edge of the image. The light colored areas are composed of Boquillas and Pen Formations. The brownish to grayish-blue color of the Terlingua uplift represents the Santa Elena Limestone. Younger Cretaceous strata of the Boquillas Formation predominate immediately south of the uplift. The area between the uplift and Mesa de Anguila forms a noticeable structural and topographic saddle (Figures 32 and 33). This saddle rises to the north and to the south but dips gently to the east and west. The overall significance, if any, of this saddle is presently unknown. 41 Figure 33. From Sotol Vista looking west and northwest, the Rio Grande is seen cutting through and separating Sierra Ponce to the left and Mesa de Anguila to the right (north). Santa Elena Canyon is the light V-shaped notch at the left edge in the center of the image. Mesa de Anguila trends northward where it dips into the subsurface. A low region shaped as a saddle separates Mesa de Anguila from the Terlingua uplift farther north. The uplift is along the horizon in the central part of this image. 39.4 Exit Sotol Vista; turn right back on Ross Maxwell Scenic Drive. 39.5 Blue Creek Ranch Overlook. This is also the western trailhead for the Dodson Trail, which passes through the Sierra Quemada before ending at Juniper Canyon on the other side of the park, and the Blue Creek Trail, which goes up into the Chisos Mountains and joins the Laguna Meadow – South Rim Trail. End of Day 1. Continue driving north on Ross Maxwell Scenic Drive. Turn left (west) on the main park road to return to Study Butte, then north to the Longhorn Ranch Motel, where we will check in for the night and set up camp. 42 DAY TWO Return to the western entrance of Big Bend National Park. Reset your odometer to zero. 0.0 Big Bend National Park, western entrance. 9.2 Junction with Ross Maxwell Scenic Drive. 19.4 Chisos Basin Junction. Turn right (south). 24.5 Lost Mine Trailhead. The Lost Mine trail provides the best, shortest route into the high Chisos Mountains. Additionally, this trail takes the hiker past Casa Grande and up the eastern side of and into the Pine Canyon caldera. 25.4 Campground entrance. Continue straight ahead. 25.6 Chisos Basin parking lot. Park for Stop 8. Stop 8. EXTRACALDERA VENTS OF THE PINE CANYON CALDERA John C. White, Department of Geology, Baylor University, Waco, Texas. The eastern side of the Chisos Basin consists of a ridge of the highest peaks in the Big Bend, including (from north to south), Casa Grande, Toll Mountain, Emory Peak, and Ward Mountain (Figures 34, 35, and 36). Ward Mountain is an intrusion of quartz syenite and is not considered further in this discussion. The other peaks, however, consist of accumulations of extrusive rock (South Rim Formation) that have been variably interpreted: Figure 34. Casa Grande volcanic dome. 43 Figure 35. Toll Mountain volcanic dome. Figure 36. Emory Peak volcanic dome. Maxwell and others (1976) interpreted these peaks as representing successive flows of ash-flow tuff and quartz trachyte to rhyolite lavas that erupted from the Pine Canyon volcanic center through a paleovalley that extended from the high Chisos Mountains to the present-day Castolon Graben (Burro Mesa, Goat Mountain, etc.). Ogley (1976) retained Maxwell and others’ (1967) interpretation, excepting for Casa Grande, which he interpreted as a rhyolite lava dome. In his mapping of the Pine Canyon volcanic center, he was the first to recognize it as a caldera and named it the “Pine Canyon caldera”. Barker and others (1986) recognized that the units of the South Rim Formation in the high Chisos Mountains erupted from a different area than the 44 units of the South Rim Formation in the Castalon Graben, and also recognized that Emory Peak is most likely a separate vent area for the rhyolite that forms the peak, but otherwise retained Ogley’s (1976) interpretation. This recognition of the different character of the two different South Rim Formations led Barker and others (1986) to (informally) revise the stratigraphic nomenclature of the South Rim Formation in the high Chisos (Table 3). Barker and others also recognized that Emory Peak represents a separate volcanic vent, and the “Burro Mesa” rhyolite of Emory Peak (renamed the “Emory Peak Rhyolite” by Urbanczyk and White, 2000) may be a rheomorphic tuff due to the apparently gradational contact between the rhyolite’s pumiceous base and massive interior easily seen on the Boot Canyon trail. Table 3. Units of the South Rim Formation. Maxwell and others (1967) Barker and others (1986) High Chisos Units Castalon Graben Units Burro Mesa Rhyolite Burro Mesa Rhyolite* Burro Mesa Rhyolite Lost Mine Member Lost Mine Member Wasp Springs Member Wasp Springs Flow-Breccia Boot Rock Member Brown Rhyolite Pine Canyon Rhyolite n/a * “Emory Peak Rhyolite” of Urbanczyk and White (2000) Urbanczyk and White (2000) retained Barker and others’ (1986) interpretation of the Pine Canyon Rhyolite, but reinterpreted the Boot Rock Member and Lost Mine Member as representing maar-type surge deposits (and occasional pyroclastic flows) and lava domes, respectively, that erupted along the ring of the Pine Canyon caldera (see Stop 9b for a summary). They interpreted the Casa Grande lava dome as a similar vent, but one that erupted outside of the caldera (an extra-caldera vent). They retained Barker and others’ (1986) interpretation of the Emory Peak vent and also suggested that earlier eruptions from the Casa Grande volcanic center were responsible for the pyroclastic and lava flows that make up Toll Mountain and the South Rim. Continued reconnaissance geology in the high Chisos Mountains has revealed that the “ash-flow tuffs” of the external facies of the Boot Rock Member beneath Toll Mountain (“The Pinnacles”) are, in fact, also maar-type surge deposits similar in character to those found within the caldera and at Burro Mesa, etc., elsewhere in the park (Figure 37). This strongly suggests that there are at least three extra-caldera vents related to the Pine Canyon caldera: Casa Grande, Toll Mountain, and Emory Peak. Which of these vents (if any) represent the source for the tuffs and lavas that form the South Rim remains unknown. 45 Figure 37. The Pinnacles beneath Toll Mountain, as viewed from the Pinnacles trail. The Pinnacles are the eroded remnants of maar-type surge deposits very similar to other such deposits mapped variably as the Boot Canyon Member or Wasp Springs Member. Note the downward dip of the unit from right to left. After Stop 8, we return the way we came to the Basin Junction, then turn right (east) towards Panther Junction (park headquarters). At Panther Junciton, reset your odometer to zero. 0.0 Panther Junction 5.3 Junction with the Glen Springs backcountry road. 6.6 The Sierra del Carmen are at 12:00. 14.9 Pine Canyon Vista on the lefthand (east) side of the road. Stop 9. 46 Stop 9. PINE CANYON OVERVIEW Figure 38. View from Stop 9. Crown Mountain, Lost Mine Peak, and Pummel Peak define the outline of Pine Canyon (PC) and the Pine Canyon caldera. Hayes Ridge in the foreground is a quartz-phyric peralkalic rhyolite that is part of the ring dike that surrounds the caldera. Hayes Ridge continues (out of view) to the west through Juniper Canyon before “disappearing” beneath Emory Peak—the rhyolite of which is geochemically identical to Hayes Ridge, strongly suggesting that the Emory Peak Rhyolite and vent area may represent a extra-caldera, post-collapse eruption of the Pine Canyon ring dike. Stop 9a. PINE CANYON WATERSHED RESEARCH PROGRAM Kevin Urbanczyk Department of Earth and Physical Sciences, Sul Ross State University, Alpine, and John Zak, Department of Biology, Texas Tech University, Lubbock The Pine Canyon Watershed Program was initiated during the summer of 1995 and is part of a network of monitored watersheds in National Parks and Equivalent Reserves funded by the Biological Resources Division of the USGS. The Pine Canyon research program represents the only long-term monitoring program in the Chihuahuan desert along the US-Mexican border that examines both abiotic and biotic contributions to watershed dynamics. The Pine Canyon Watershed covers approximately 7,800 ha and extends about 19 km in an 47 easterly direction from the central Chisos Mountains. Permanent monitoring sites have been established in the five vegetation zones that exist along the watershed (see Figure 39): 1) Lost Mine - High elevation forests dominated by Pinyon Pine and Live Oak (6900 ft, “A” on map), 2) Oak-juniper association in upper Pine Canyon (6000 ft), 3) Sotol-grassland (5020 ft, “B” on map), 4) Creosotebush association at Chilicotal Springs (3000 ft, “C” on map) and Rice Tanks (3322 ft, “E” on map), and 5) Lowland Chihuahuan Desert scrub (2610 ft, “F” on map), Glenn Springs location. Long-term research objectives of the Program include the determination of precipitation and other meteorological data, surface and groundwater hydrology and chemistry, trends in microbial activity and soil nitrogen dynamics, decomposition and fungal diversity, and plant species variations occurring due to anthropogenic inputs. Significant findings to date include the observation that atmospheric pollution is affecting the desert ecosystem. These atmospheric inputs include nitrogen and sulfate that cause decreases in bacterial functional diversity and soil pH values. These decreases in soil pH are also linked to an overall increase in acidity of local precipitation. Stop 9b. PINE CANYON CALDERA Kevin Urbanczyk and John C. White, Department of Earth and Physical Sciences, Sul Ross State University, Alpine The Pine Canyon caldera is an Oligocene (31.7 to 32.9 Ma) volcanic center in the Chisos Mountains in Big Bend National Park, Texas. It is located within the eastern alkalic belt of the Trans Pecos Magmatic Province. Barker and others (1986) described the Pine Canyon caldera as a down-sag caldera that formed as the ground gradually subsided during the eruption of the Pine Canyon Rhyolite rather than collapsing and producing a topographic scarp around the margin of the caldera. This eruption was followed by a second eruption of ashflow tuff (the Boot Rock Member) in addition to quartz trachyte and rhyolite lavas (Lost Mine Member), which comprise the South Rim Formation. The Pine Canyon rhyolite has previously been interpreted as the caldera forming ignimbrite, an interpretation that we retain. The Boot Rock member has been interpreted as ash-flow tuff that filled the caldera (caldera fill facies), and breached the southwest wall and flowed toward the southwest (outflow facies). The Lost Mine member has been interpreted as a sequence of lavas and ashflow tuffs that erupted from the caldera and flowed to the southwest, but is not currently found within the caldera. We instead reinterpret the caldera fill facies of the Boot Rock member to be maar-type surge deposits occasionally overlain by block and ash-flow deposits produced by a semicircular series of postcaldera ring vents located along the margin of the Pine Canyon caldera. In a similar fashion as documented at Burro Mesa, Goat Mountain, and Cerro Castellan (the Burro Mesa "group"), these surge deposits demonstrate concentric inward dips toward lava domes. This is particularly well exhibited along the arcuate ridge starting with Crown Mountain in the south, and continuing counter clockwise to Pummel, George Wright, Panther and Lost Mine peaks. These deposits do not directly 48 Figure 39. Map of the Pine Canyon research area. 49 correlate with the Burro Mesa group of eruptions, but appear to have resulted from similar eruption mechanisms. 15.5 Eastern end of the River Road. 15.9 Lower Tornillo Creek Bridge 16.6 Junction with the Hot Springs road. 17.7 Junction with the Old Ore road. 18.3 Tunnel. The tunnel cuts through Santa Elena Limestone. 18.4 Rio Grande Overlook 19.1 Junction with Boquillas Canyon road; Turn Left. 20.5 Road to Boquillas, Mexico, crossing. 21.8 Junction with Boquillas Overlook road; Turn right. 22.3 Boquillas Overlook. Stop 10. Stop 10. GEOMORPHOLOGIC CHANGES IN THE RIO GRANDE / RIO BRAVO CHANNEL AND FLOODPLAIN Carol Purchase, National Park Service, Big Bend National Park, Texas. The Rio Grande / Rio Bravo river channel and floodplain have changed markedly over the past 100 years. Irrigation diversions began to reduce low flows as early as the 1700's in New Mexico. Elephant Butte dam first started reducing flood flows in 1916. Currently, this part of the Rio Grande is hydrologically disconnected with the Rio Grande in El Paso and above. All floods from the U.S. portion of the river have been virtually eliminated by the many dams in New Mexico and the small channel through El Paso. The river channel disappears below Fort Quitman (60 miles below El Paso) into a large Salt Cedar forest. The Rio Conchos, which joins the Rio Grande/ Rio Bravo at Presidio, Texas, has always provided the largest floods through this part of the river, during late summer and early fall. Due to dams in this watershed, floods have been reduced by about 50%. With the reduction in flows, the channel has narrowed as the river is unable to transport the sediment deposited by tributaries (this is especially evident at the mouth of Terlingua Creek at Santa Elena Canyon, Stop 3). Salt Cedar, an exotic tree, now lines much of the river, replacing native cottonwoods and willows. This tree colonizes the terraces formed from the larger floods and then stabilizes the floodplain, reducing the channel capacity, which increases the flood height of subsequent floods. River 50 cane (Arundo donax), another exotic, has also increased over the past several decades, further narrowing the channel. Note the comparison between the historic picture (the handout) of the river and the scene below this overlook (Figure 40). The broad sandy riverbed is gone, replaced by a vegetated canal. Floods today would have a hard time scouring the riverbanks to restore the natural river geomorphology. Figure 40. View of the Rio Grande / Rio Bravo looking downstream from the Boquillas Overlook. 22.8 Junction with main road; Turn right. 23.7 Boquillas Canyon parking lot. Stop 11. Stop 11. RIO GRANDE HOLOCENE VALLEY FILL Rolfe D. Mandel, Department of Geography, University of Kansas, Lawrence Near its terminus at the entrance to the Boquillas Canyon parking area, Boquillas Canyon Road winds along the margin of the valley floor of the Rio Grande. The road crosses an arroyo before it turns into the parking lot at the head of the Boquillas Canyon trail. This arroyo has deeply dissected the Holocene valley fill of the Rio Grande on the south side of the road. At Stop 11 (Figure 1), we will examine thick deposits of fine-grained Holocene valley fill beneath the floodplain of the Rio Grande. In 1996, a single cutbank was cleaned with a shovel and described (Mandel, 1996). Four buried soils were identified in the upper 342 cm of the valley fill (Figure 41 and Table 4). These buried soils have weakly developed A-Bw profiles and, with the exception of a bed of gravel in the C2 horizon of the third buried soil, are composed of calcareous, silty clay loam. Humates from the upper 10 cm of the Ab3 horizon yielded a radiocarbon age of 3,140+60 yr B.P. (Tx-8308). This age suggests that most, if not all, of the Table 4. 51 Table 4. Description of the section at Stop 11. ______________________________________________________________________________ Landform: Valley floor of the Rio Grande Slope: 1 percent Drainage class: Well drained Vegetation: Creosote bush, mesquite, prickly pear, bristlegrass, and fluff grass Described by: Rolfe Mandel Date described: September 28, 1995 Remarks: Humates from the upper 10 cm of the Ab3 horizon yielded a radiocarbon age of 3,140+60 yr B.P. (Tx-8308). ______________________________________________________________________________ Depth Soil (cm) Horizon Description 0-10 A Pale brown (10YR 6/3) light silty clay loam, brown (10YR 5/3) moist; weak fine subangular blocky structure parting to weak medium and coarse granular; slightly hard, very friable; common fine roots; violent effervescence; clear smooth boundary. 10-58 C Laminated pale brown (10YR 6/3) and brown (10YR 5/3) silt loam and light silty clay loam, brown (10YR 5/3) and yellowish brown (10YR 5/4) moist; massive; slightly hard, very friable; laminae are 1-3 mm thick; few fine and very fine roots; violent effervescence; abrupt smooth boundary. 58-71 Ab1 Pale brown (10YR 6/3) light silty clay loam, yellowish brown (10YR 5/4) moist; weak medium prismatic structure parting to weak fine subangular blocky; slightly hard, friable; violent effervescence; gradual smooth boundary. 71-106 Bwb1 Pale brown (10YR 6/3) silty clay loam, brown (10YR 5/3) moist; very weak fine subangular blocky structure; slightly hard, friable; violent effervescence; abrupt smooth boundary. 106-123 Ab2 123-221 Bwb2 221-238 Ab3 Brown (10YR 5/3) silty clay loam, yellowish brown (10YR 5/4) moist; weak medium prismatic structure parting to weak fine subangular blocky; slightly hard, friable; violent effervescence; gradual smooth boundary. 238-260 Bwb3 Very pale brown (10YR 7/3) silty clay loam, pale brown (10YR 6/3) to yellowish brown (10YR 5/4) moist; weak medium prismatic structure parting to weak fine subangular blocky structure; slightly hard, friable; violent effervescence; abrupt smooth boundary. 260-293 C1 Laminated pale brown (10YR 6/3) and brown (10YR 5/3) silty clay loam and silt loam, brown (10YR 5/3) and yellowish brown (10YR 5/4) moist; massive; slightly hard, very friable; violent effervescence; abrupt smooth boundary. 293-310 C2 Stratified coarse and fine gravel; single grain; loose; clasts are well rounded to subrounded; abrupt smooth boundary. 310-328 Ab4 Pale brown (10YR 6/3) silt loam to light silty clay loam, yellowish brown (10YR 5/4) moist; weak medium prismatic structure parting to weak fine subangular blocky; slightly hard, friable; violent effervescence; gradual smooth boundary. 328-342+ Bwb4 Very pale brown (10YR 7/3) silty clay loam, pale brown (10YR 6/3) to yellowish brown (10YR 5/4) moist; weak coarse prismatic structure parting to weak medium subangular blocky structure; slightly hard, friable; violent effervescence. Brown (10YR 5/3) light silty clay loam, yellowish brown (10YR 5/4) moist; weak medium prismatic structure parting to weak fine subangular blocky; slightly hard, friable; violent effervescence; gradual smooth boundary. Pale brown (10YR 6/3) silty clay loam, brown (10YR 5/3) moist; very weak fine subangular blocky structure; slightly hard, friable; common lenses of fine gravel at a depth of 214-221 cm; violent effervescence; abrupt smooth boundary. 52 Figure 41. Section at Stop 11. 53 alluvium in the cutbank was deposited during the late Holocene. The buried soils indicate that late-Holocene alluviation was punctuated by episodes of floodplain stability. However, weak soil development (thin A-Bw profiles) during this period suggests that each episode of stability was relatively short, perhaps lasting a few hundred years. Although the stratigraphy of Holocene valley fill at Stop 11 is more complex than the stratigraphy observed beneath distal segments of the floodplain of the Rio Grande elsewhere on the east side of the park, the alluvial chronology is fairly consistent from one locality to the next (Mandel, 1996). For example, where San Vicente Arroyo has dissected the floodplain of the Rio Grande adjacent to River Road, humates from a deeply buried soil yielded radiocarbon ages of 3,430+70 yr B.P. (Tx-8310) and 3,470+50 yr B.P. (Tx-8309) (Mandel, 1996). These radiocarbon ages, combined with the radiocarbon age determined on the soil at Stop 11, suggest that the floodplain of the Rio Grande was relatively stable around 3,400-3,100 yr B.P. Renewed aggradation after ca. 3,100 yr B.P. resulted in deep burial of former stable surfaces. This is an important aspect of late Quaternary landscape evolution, and, as will be noted at Stop 11, is crucial to the interpretation of the archaeological record of the Big Bend region. 27.3 Junction with main road; Turn left towards Rio Grande Village. Rio Grande Village Store. You may stop here for gasoline, supplies, restroom, etc. The main caravan will turn right to the Rio Grande Village picnic area for lunch. 28.3 29.1 Rio Grande Village Picnic area. LUNCH STOP. After lunch, we will backtrack to the Rio Grande Village store and then return to Panther Junction. 29.8 Rio Grande Village store. Turn left. 49.9 Panther Junction. Turn right towards Marathon, Texas. 57.9 Fossil Bone Exhibit junction; turn right. 58.2 Fossil Bone Exhibit parking lot. Stop 12. Stop 12. FOSSIL BONE EXHIBIT VISTA Stop 12a. A VIEW OF THE TORNILLO GROUP Thomas M. Lehman, Department of Geosciences, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX The Fossil Bone Exhibit sits atop a low northwest-trending sandstonecapped cuesta known as Exhibit Ridge. This homoclinal ridge interrupts what is otherwise the featureless broad alluvial valley of Tornillo Creek, here about six miles across, known as Tornillo Flat (the Spanish word "tornillo" refers to the screw bean mesquite trees that grow here along the intermittent water courses). 54 Exposed along the valley walls, all around Tornillo Flat, are strata of Late Cretaceous through Eocene age that Udden (1907) named the Tornillo "Clay". These strata are composed primarily of recessively weathering multicolored mudstone interbedded with conglomeratic sandstone lenses that hold up cuestas and hogback ridges amidst low lying badlands. The mudstone intervals are rich in swelling smectite clays subject to rapid erosion even in the arid climate of Big Bend. For the most part, these easily erodible strata are buried under the alluvium of Tornillo Creek, and only exposed along the sides of the valley beneath the retreating erosional escarpments of the Rosillos, Sierra del Carmen, and Chisos pediments. In the Tornillo Flat area, strata of the Tornillo Group dip to the south-southwest except where they are bowed up along the edges of the laccoliths that comprise McKinney Hills (to the east) and Grapevine Hills (to the west), and where the section is repeated by a series of northwest-trending normal faults. The Tornillo Clay was studied in detail and mapped for the first time by Maxwell and others (1967), who revised the name to Tornillo Group and subdivided the strata into three formations; in ascending order these are the Javelina Formation (named for Javelina Creek, which drains the northeast side of Tornillo Flat), Black Peaks Formation (named for the Black Peaks - three small intrusions on the east side of Tornillo Flat), and Hannold Hill Formation (named for Hannold Hill, on the south side of Tornillo Flat where the park highway climbs out of the valley). Although originally believed by Udden to be entirely Late Cretaceous in age, the Tornillo Group was shown by Maxwell and others (1967) to include strata of Paleocene and Eocene age as well. They attempted to place the contacts between the three formations so that they coincided approximately with the Cretaceous/Paleocene and Paleocene/Eocene boundaries. Their geologic map of Big Bend National Park remains the most detailed depiction of the distribution of these strata available today. As the formations were originally defined, the Javelina Formation included strata primarily of Late Cretaceous age, the Black Peaks of Paleocene age, and the Hannold Hill of early Eocene age. The Fossil Bone Exhibit displays fossils found in the Hannold Hill Formation, near the base of the formation, within the Exhibit Ridge Sandstone Member (the resistant sandstone unit that holds up Exhibit Ridge). All of the Tornillo Group sediments accumulated in fluvial channel, floodplain, and lacustrine environments, and throughout deposition of the sequence, stream flow was to the southeast (Lehman, 1985; Beatty, 1992; Hartnell, J.A., 1980; Rigsby, 1982, 1986). In addition to the outcrops on Tornillo Flat, these strata are exposed in the valleys of Dawson Creek and Rough Run Creek along the western side of the Park, and in the valley of Juniper Draw and other tributaries of the Rio Grande south of the Chisos Mountains. Although most of the exposures of the Tornillo Group are found within Big Bend Park, small outcrops are also found in areas north of the Park, west, and south of the Park in Mexico. The Tornillo Group is of broad interest because it preserves the southernmost succession of Late Cretaceous, Paleocene, and Eocene continental faunas and floras known in North America, and these differ in many 55 respects from those found in northern latitudes (Schiebout, 1974; Schiebout and others, 1987; Rapp and others, 1983; Standhardt, 1986; Runkel, 1988, 1990; Lehman, 1987; 1997; Wheeler and Lehman, 2000; Lehman, 2001). For example, the Javelina Formation preserves remains of a dinosaur fauna dominated by the sauropod Alamosaurus and the giant pterodactyl Quetzalcoatlus. Remains of these animals are not found in northern latitudes (e.g., Wyoming, Montana, and Canada), where at the same time such animals as the horned dinosaur Triceratops and the theropod Tyrannosaurus dominated the fauna (Lehman, 2001). Such observations provide evidence for the existence of latitudinal life zones during Late Cretaceous time. Similar differences are found in the Paleocene and Eocene faunas of the Black Peaks and Hannold Hill Formations. These strata also contain a record of the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary extinction event, the closest continental record of this event in proximity to the presumed impact site at Chicxulub, Mexico (Lehman, 1989, 1990; Straight, 1996). The Tornillo Group strata are also important in recording the progression of the Laramide Orogeny in the southern Cordillera and development of an intermontane basin, known as the Tornillo Basin (Wilson, 1970; Lehman, 1986; Lehman, 1991). Detailed mapping of the Tornillo Group strata in areas around Laramide structures, as well as sedimentary provenance and paleocurrent data, indicate that compressional deformation began during deposition of the Javelina Formation (70 to 65 Ma) to define the margins of the Tornillo Basin (Lehman, 1991). Strata within the Tornillo Basin were deformed during early Eocene time (57 to 54 Ma) and again prior to middle Eocene time (54 to 51 Ma). There is little evidence for compressional deformation after the middle Eocene (post 51 Ma). Stop 12b. TORNILLO FLATS GRASSLANDS Carol Purchase, National Park Service, Big Bend National Park, Texas. The large flat valley along Tornillo Creek and the flats in the northern portion of the park once supported lush stands of grass. Historical accounts describe “endless fields of grass”, “stirrup high grass” and also mention settlers used to harvest hay on these flats for their livestock. When this land became a park, grass was scarce on these flats due to overgrazing during dry years (Figure xx). The soil found here, Tornillo Loam, a silty clay loam is extremely fragile once vegetative cover is lost. 58 Figure xx. Tornillo Flat, 1950. In the past 50 years, many areas have recovered to creosote, and in some areas, native grasslands have returned, however many areas have accelerated erosion and are now on a trend towards severely eroded badlands (Figure xx). The most severely eroded areas tend to be on areas with slightly higher slope or associated with water diversions built by the ranchers to funnel water into stock tanks. Many of these areas have now lost 2 to 16 inches of topsoil and have probably lost the ability to recover to historical native grasslands. Over 1000 acres of gully systems have been mapped, and an estimated 10,000 more acres are severely degraded in the park. These valleys were on a depositional trend prior to the last century; gradually filling with sediment deposited by 9 Point Dray and Tornillo Creek. Now the trend is reversed and the valleys are being eroded away, on a trend towards badlands which will eventually extend across the valley floor to the surrounding hills. 59 Figure xx. Typical eroded area with 2 to 12 inches of soil loss. 58.4 Junction with main highway. Turn right. 76.1 Persimmon Gap and Northern Entrance to Big Bend National Park. End of Field Trip and Day 2. Thank you very much for attending and making this a successful event! Have a safe trip back home. 60 REFERENCES CITED Adkins, W.S. (1933) Mesozoic System in Texas, in The Geology of Texas, vol. 1, Sellards, E.H., Adkins, W.S., and Plummer, F. (eds.), University of Texas Bulletin 3232, p. 240-518. Albritton, C.C., Jr. and Bryan, K. (1939) Quaternary stratigraphy in the Davis Mountains, Trans-Pecos Texas. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 50: 1423-1474. Anglen, J. and Lehman, T. (2000) Habitat of the giant crocodilian Deinosuchus, Aguja Formation (Upper Cretaceous), Big Bend National Park, Texas. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 20(3): 26A. Baker, C.L. (1934) Major structural features of Trans-Pecos Texas, in The Geology of Texas, v. II; Structural and economic geology: Austin, University of Texas Bulletin 3401, p. 137-214. Barker, D.S. (2000) Down to Earth at Tuff Canyon, Big Bend National Park, Texas. The University of Texas Bureau of Economic Geology, DE 2, 40 p. Beatty, H.L. (1992) Fluvial sedimentology and sandstone petrography of the Hannold Hill Formation (Eocene), Big Bend, Texas. Unpublished M.S. thesis, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas, 113 p. Becker, S.W. (1976) Field relations and petrology of the Burro Mesa “Riebeckite” Rhyolite, Big Bend National Park, Texas. Unpublished M.S. thesis, University of California at Santa Cruz, 116 p. Bryan, K., and Albritton, C.C., Jr. (1943) Soil phenomena as evidence of climatic change. American Journal of Science, 241: 469-490. Collinsworth, B.C. and Rohr, D.M. (1986) An Eocene carbonate lacustrine deposit, Brewster County, west Texas, in Pausé, P.H. and Spears, R.G. (eds.) Geology of the Big Bend area and Solitario Dome, Texas, West Texas Geological Society Fieldtrip Guidebook, Publication 86-82, p.117124. Copeland, P., Henry, C.D., Tsai, H., and Long, L. (1992) 40Ar/39Ar geochronology of the Burro Mesa Rhyolites, Big Bend National Park, Texas. 1991 Research Newsletter, Big Bend National Park, p. 2728. Davies, K. L. and Lehman, T. M. (1989) The WPA quarries, in Busbey, A.B. and Lehman, T.M. (eds.) Vertebrate Paleontology, Biostratigraphy, and Depositional Environments, Latest Cretaceous and Tertiary, Big Bend 61 Area, Texas. Society of Vertebrate Paleontology, 49th Annual Meeting Fieldtrip Guidbook, p.32-42. Erdlac, R.J., Jr. (1988) Structural development of the Terlingua uplift, Brewster and Presidio Counties, Texas. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Texas at Austin, 403 p. Erdlac, R.J., Jr. (1990) A Laramide-age push-up block: The structures and formation of the Terlingua-Solitario structural block, Big Bend region, Texas. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 102: 1065-1076. Erdlac, R.J., Jr. (1992) A mathematical model of push-up block formation: An example from the Big Bend region, Texas. Journal of Geophysical Research, 97: 11,073-11,083. Erdlac, R.J., Jr. (1994) Laramide paleostress trajectories from stylolites in the Big Bend region, in Laroche, M.T., and Viveiros, J. (eds.) Structure and tectonics of the Big Bend and southern Permian Basin, Texas. West Texas Geological Society Publication 94-95, p. 165-187. Goldich, S.S. and Elms, M.A. (1949) Stratigraphy and petrology of the Buck Hill Quadrangle, Texas. Bulletin of the Geological Society of America, 60: 1133-1182. Hartnell, J.A. (1980) Vertebrate paleontology, depositional environment, and sandstone provenance of Early Eocene rocks on Tornillo Flat, Big Bend National Park, Texas. Unpublished M.S. thesis, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, 174 p. Henry, C.D. and McDowell, F.W. (1986) Geochronology of magmatism in the Tertiary volcanic field, Trans-Pecos, Texas, in Price, J.G., Henry, C.D. Parker, D.F. and Barker, D.S. (eds.) Igneous Geology of Trans-Pecos Texas: Field trip guide and research articles. University of Texas at Austin Bureau of Economic Geology Guidebook 23, p. 99-122. Henry, C.D. and Price, J.G. (1984) Variations in caldera development in the Tertiary volcanic field of Trans-Pecos, Texas. Journal of Geophysical Research, 89: 8765-8786. Henry, C.D., Price, J.G., Parker, D.F., and Wolff, J.A. (1989) Mid-Tertiary silicic alkalic magmatism of Trans-Pecos Texas: Rheomorphic tuffs and extensive silicic lavas, in Chapin, C.E., and Zidek, J., (eds.) Field excursions to volcanic terranes in the western United States, Volume I: Southern Rocky Mountains region. New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources Memoir 46, p. 231-274. 62 Henry, C.D., Price, J.G., and Miser, D.E. (1989) Geology and Tertiary igneous activity of the Hen Egg Mountain and Christmas Mountain quadrangles, Big Bend region, Trans-Pecos Texas. University of Texas at Austin Bureau of Economic Geology Report of Investigations 183, 105 p. Hill, R.T. (1901) Running the canyons of the Rio Grande. Century Magazine, 61: 371-387. Hill, R.T. (1902) The cinnabar deposits of the Big Bend province of Texas. Engineering Mineral Journal, 47: 305-307. Holt, G.S. (1998) Trace-element partitioning of alkali feldspar in Burro Mesa Rhyolite and other units of the Trans-Pecos magmatic province. Unpublished M.S. thesis, Baylor University, Waco, Texas, 190 p. James, E.W. and Henry, C. D. (1993) Southeastern extent of the North American craton in Texas and northern Chihuahua as revealed by Pb isotopes. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 105: 116-126. Kelley, J.C., Campbell, T.N., and Lehmer, D.J. (1940) The Association of Archaeological Materials with Geological Deposits in the Big Bend Region of Texas. Sul Ross State Teachers College Bulletin 21, No. 3, Alpine, Texas. Lehman, T.M. (1985) Stratigraphy, sedimentology, and paleontology of Late Cretaceous (Campanian-Maastrichtian) sedimentary rocks in Trans-Pecos Texas. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Texas at Austin, 310 p. Lehman, T.M. (1985) Transgressive-regressive cycles and environments of coal deposition, Upper Cretaceous, Trans-Pecos Texas. Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, 35: 431-438. Lehman, T.M. (1986) Late Cretaceous sedimentation in Trans-Pecos Texas, in Pausé, P.H. and Spears, R.G. (eds.) Geology of the Big Bend area and Solitario Dome, Texas, West Texas Geological Society Fieldtrip Guidebook, Publication 86-82, p.105-110. Lehman, T.M. (1987) Late Maastrichtian paleoenvironments and dinosaur biogeography in the western interior of North America. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 60: 189-217. Lehman, T.M. (1988) Stratigraphy of the Cretaceous-Tertiary and PaleoceneEocene transition rocks of Big Bend: discussion. Journal of Geology, 96: 627-631. 63 Lehman, T.M. (1989) Upper Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) paleosols in TransPecos Texas. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 101: 188-203. Lehman, T. M. (1989) Chasmosaurus mariscalensis, sp. nov., a new ceratopsian dinosaur from Texas. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 9(2): 137-162. Lehman, T.M. (1990) Paleosols and the Cretaceous/Tertiary transition in the Big Bend region of Texas. Geology, 18: 362-364. Lehman, T.M. (1991) Sedimentation and Tectonism in the Laramide Tornillo Basin of West Texas. Sedimentary Geology, 75:9-28. Lehman, T. M. (1997) Campanian dinosaur biogeography in the western interior of North America, in Wolberg, D. and Stump, E. (eds.) Dinofest International, proceedings of a symposium sponsored by Arizona State University. Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences, Special Publication, p.223-240 Lehman, T.M. (2001) Late Cretaceous Dinosaur Provinciality, in Tanke, D. and Carpenter, K. (eds.) Mesozoic Vertebrate LIfe, Indiana University Press, p. 310-328. Lehman, T.M., and Wheeler, E.A. (2001) A fossil dicotyledonous woodland/forest from the Upper Cretaceous of Big Bend National Park, Texas. Palaios, 16: 102-108. Lonsdale, J.T. (1940) Igneous rocks of the Terlingua-Solitario region, Texas. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 51: 1539-1626. Macon, C.C. (1994) Facies analysis and sedimentology of transgressive shoreline deposits in the Aguja Formation (Upper Cretaceous), TransPecos Texas. Unpublished M.S. thesis, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, 212 p. Mandel, R.D. (1994) Holocene Landscape Evolution in the Pawnee River Valley, Southwestern Kansas. Kansas Geological Survey Bulletin 236, Lawrence, Kansas. Mandel, R.D. (1996) Description of Section 1, Calamity Creek valley, Elephant Mountain State Park. Unpublished report on file at the Center for Big Bend Studies, Sul Ross State University, Alpine, Texas. Mandel, R.D. (1996) Geomorphological Investigation of Route 12 (Panther Junction to Rio Grande Village) and the Boquillas Canyon Road, Big Bend National Park: Implications for Archaeological Research. Report prepared for the National Park Service, Big Bend National Park. 64 Maxwell, R.A. and Dietrich, J.W. (1970) Correlation of Tertiary rock units, west Texas. University of Texas at Austin Bureau of Economic Geology Report of Investigations 70, 34 p. Maxwell, R.A., Lonsdale, J.T., Hazzard, R.T., and Wilson, J.A. (1967) Geology of Big Bend National Park, Brewster County, Texas. University of Texas Bureau of Economic Geology Publication 6711, 320 p. McAnulty, W.N. (1955) Geology of the Cathedral Mountain Quadrangle, Brewster County, Texas. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 66: 531-578. Mosley, J.L. (1992) The paleoecology and biostratigraphy of the McKinney Springs Tongue of the Pen Formation (Late Cretaceous) Big Bend National Park, Texas. Unpublished M.S. thesis, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, 116 p. Parker, D.F., Barker, D.S., Holt, G.S., and White, J.C. (2000) Peralkalic rhyolite of the Davis Mountains and Big Bend areas, Texas: Guidebook, Field Trip Number One, South-Central Geological Society of America Meeting, Fayetteville, Arkansas, 45 p. Potter, L. S. (1996) Chemical variation along strike in feldspathoidal rocks of the Eastern Alkalic Belt,Trans-Pecos Magmatic Province, Texas and New Mexico. Canadian Mineralogist, 34: 241-264. Ragsdale, K.B. (1976) Quicksilver: Terlingua and the Chisos Mining Company: Texas A&M Press, College Station, 327 p. Rapp, S.D., MacFadden, B.J. and Schiebout, J.A. (1983) Magnetic polarity stratigraphy of the early Tertiary Black Peaks Formation, Big Bend National Park, Texas. Journal of Geology, 91: 555-572. Record, R. S. and Lehman, T. M. (1989) Sedimentology and stable isotope geochemistry of organic-rich shales and lignites in the lower Aguja Formation (Late Cretaceous) of Texas. Geological Society of America, Abstracts with Program, 21(1):38. Rigsby, C.A. (1982) Provenance and depositional environments of the middle Eocene Canoe Formation, Big Bend National Park, Brewster County, Texas. Unpublished M.S. thesis, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, 142 p. Rigsby, C.A. (1986) The Big Yellow Sandstone: a sandy braided stream. in Pausé, P.H. and Spears, R.G. (eds.) Geology of the Big Bend area and 65 Solitario Dome, Texas, West Texas Geological Society Fieldtrip Guidebook, Publication 86-82, p. 111-116. Rowe, T., R.L. Cifelli, T.M. Lehman, and A. Weil (1992) The Campanian Terlingua local fauna, with a summary of other vertebrates from the Aguja Formation, Trans-Pecos Texas. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 12(4): 472-493. Runkel, A.C. (1988) Stratigraphy, sedimentation, and vertebrate paleontology of Eocene rocks in the Big Bend region of southwest Texas. Unpublished, Ph.D. dissertation, University of Texas at Austin, 283 p. Runkel, A.C. (1990) Lateral and temporal changes in volcanogenic sedimentation; analysis of two Eocene sedimentary aprons, Big Bend region, Texas. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology, 60: 747-760. Schiebout, J.A. (1974) Vertebrate paleontology and paleoecology of Paleocene Black Peaks Formation, Big Bend National Park, Texas. Texas Memorial Museum Bulletin, 88 p. Schiebout, J.A., Rigsby, C.A., Rapp, S.D., Hartnell, J.A., and Standhardt, B.R. (1987) Stratigraphy of the Cretaceous-Tertiary and Paleocene-Eocene transition rocks of Big Bend National Park, Texas. Journal of Geology, 95: 359-375. Schroeder, M. R. and Lehman, T. M. (1989) Facies- and position-dependent diagenesis in an Upper Cretaceous deltaic sand body. American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin, 73(3): 410 Schumm, S.A. (1977) The Fluvial System. New York, Wiley. Standhardt, B.R. (1986) Vertebrate paleontology of the Cretaceous/Tertiary transition of Big Bend National park, Texas. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, 298 p. Stevens, J.B., Stevens, M.S., and Wilson, J.A. (1984) Devil’s Graveyard Formation (new), Eocene and Oligocene age, Trans-Pecos Texas. Texas Memorial Museum Bulletin 32, 21 p. Straight, W.H. (1996) Stratigraphy and paleontology of the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary, Big Bend National Park, Texas. Unpublished M.S. thesis, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, 102 p. Udden, J.A. (1907) A sketch of the geology of the Chisos country. University of Texas Bureau of Economic Geology Bulletin 93, 101 p. 66 Urbanczyk, K.M. and White, J.C., 2000, Pine Canyon caldera, Big Bend National Park, Texas: A new interpretation. Geological Society of America, Abstracts with Programs, 32(3): 43. Wagner, J.R., and Lehman, T.M. (2001) A new species of Kritosaurus from the Cretaceous of Big Bend National Park, Brewster County, Texas. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 21:110-111A. Walton, A.W. (1979) Volcanic sediment apron in the Tascotal Formation (Oligocene?), Trans-Pecos Texas. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology, 49: 303-314. Wheeler, E.A., and Lehman, T.M. (2000) Late Cretaceous woody dicots from the Aguja and Javelina Formations, Big Bend National Park, Texas. International Association of Wood Anatomy Journal, 21: 83-120. Wilson, J.A. (1970) Vertebrate biostratigraphy of Trans-Pecos Texas. West Texas Geological Society Publication 71-59, p.159-166. Yates, R.G., and Thompson, G.A. (1959) Geology and quicksilver deposits of the Terlingua district, Texas: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 312, 114 p. 67