A field guide to Newberry Volcano, Oregon

  1. Robert A. Jensen*
  1. U.S. Forest Service (retired), Bend, Oregon 97701, USA
  1. Julie M. Donnelly-Nolan*
  1. U.S. Geological Survey, 345 Middlefield Road, Menlo Park, California 94025, USA
  1. Daniele Mckay*
  1. Department of Geological Sciences, 1272 University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon 97403-1272, USA
  1. * bjensen{at}bendnet.com; jdnolan{at}usgs.gov; dmckay1{at}uoregon.edu

Abstract

Newberry Volcano is located in central Oregon at the intersection of the Cascade Range and the High Lava Plains. Its lavas range in age from ca. 0.5 Ma to late Holocene. Erupted products range in composition from basalt through rhyolite and cover ~3000 km2. The most recent caldera-forming eruption occurred ~80,000 years ago. This trip will highlight a revised understanding of the volcano's history based on new detailed geologic work. Stops will also focus on evidence for ice and flooding on the volcano, as well as new studies of Holocene mafic eruptions. Newberry is one of the most accessible U.S. volcanoes, and this trip will visit a range of lava types and compositions including tholeiitic and calc-alkaline basalt flows, cinder cones, and rhyolitic domes and tuffs. Stops will include early distal basalts as well as the youngest intracaldera obsidian flow.

    • Accepted 18 June 2009.
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This Chapter

  1. doi: 10.1130/2009.fld015(03)​ GSA Field Guides v. 15, p. 53-79