The Columbia River Flood Basalt Province 2013
DOI: 10.1130/2013.2497(11)
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Source materials for the main phase of the Columbia River Basalt Group: Geochemical evidence and implications for magma storage and transport

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Cited by 35 publications
(119 citation statements)
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“…Volume 42 (2008) and Wolff and Ramos (2013) argue that the plume was centred near the western Snake River Plain, where the Oregon-Idaho graben and Chief Joseph dyke swarm converge; the magma moved north through a system of dykes similar to that suggested for the Mull complex in Scotland. Camp et al (2003) and Camp and Ross (2004), however, argue that the plume originated in the Steens area and the plume head moved north over time reaching the northern part of the Chief Joseph dyke swarm.…”
Section: Geoscience Canadamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Volume 42 (2008) and Wolff and Ramos (2013) argue that the plume was centred near the western Snake River Plain, where the Oregon-Idaho graben and Chief Joseph dyke swarm converge; the magma moved north through a system of dykes similar to that suggested for the Mull complex in Scotland. Camp et al (2003) and Camp and Ross (2004), however, argue that the plume originated in the Steens area and the plume head moved north over time reaching the northern part of the Chief Joseph dyke swarm.…”
Section: Geoscience Canadamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The geochemical and isotopic data have also been invaluable for understanding the origin of CRBG magma (e.g. Wright et al 1973Wright et al , 1989Reidel 1983;Hooper and Hawkesworth 1993;Durand and Sen 2004;Ramos et al 2005Ramos et al , 2013Camp and Hanan 2008;Wolff et al 2008;Wolff and Ramos 2013;Rodriguez and Sen 2013). A major reason why a regional CRBG geochemical stratigraphy is possible is that many lava flows have a remarkable 'bulk' geochemical homogeneity despite their huge volumes and distances traveled.…”
Section: Compositionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Many researchers, including Duncan (1982), Goles (1988, 1995), Draper (1991), Geist and Richards (1993), Hooper and Hawkesworth (1993), Camp (1995, Dodson and others (1997), Hooper andothers (2002, 2007), Camp and others (2003), Camp and Ross (2004), Camp and Hanan (2008), Wolf and others (2008), Wolf and Ramos (2013), and Benson and Mahood (2016), see a link between the CRBG and a Yellowstone hotspot, with both being part of a larger volcanic province. This larger volcanic province includes the voluminous, middle Miocene rhyolite eruptive centers of northern Nevada and southeastern Oregon and the diverging bimodal and time-transgressive rhyolitic volcanic Figure 2.…”
Section: Wallowa Mountainsmentioning
confidence: 99%