Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 43
pro vyhledávání: '"John W. Hillhouse"'
Autor:
Mark E. Stelten, Keith A. Howard, Ryan S. Crow, Philip A. Pearthree, Jonathan E. Schwing, P. Kyle House, Duane E. Champion, John W. Hillhouse, Matthew T. Heizler
Publikováno v:
Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs.
Autor:
John W. Hillhouse, Sherman Gromme
Publikováno v:
Lithosphere. 3:275-288
We report remanent magnetization measurements from 13 sites in Cretaceous plutonic rocks in the northern Sierra Nevada (38°N–39.5°N). By increasing the number of available paleomagnetic sites, the new data tighten constraints on the displacement
Autor:
Robert J. McLaughlin, Andrei M. Sarna-Wojcicki, Alan L. Deino, Elmira Wan, Michael E. Perkins, David B. Wahl, John W. Hillhouse, David L. Wagner, Robert J. Fleck
Publikováno v:
Geosphere. 7:599-628
The Lawlor Tuff is a widespread dacitic tephra layer produced by Plinian eruptions and ash flows derived from the Sonoma Volcanics, a volcanic area north of San Francisco Bay in the central Coast Ranges of California, USA. The younger, chemically sim
Autor:
Andrei M. Sarna-Wojcicki, Garniss H. Curtis, N. Timothy Hall, Charles E. Meyer, John W. Hillhouse
Publikováno v:
Quaternary Research. 45:327-331
Publikováno v:
Tectonics. 14:1133-1152
We report paleomagnetic results from layered igneous rocks that imply substantial post mid-Cretaceous poleward motion of the Insular superterrane (western Canadian Cordillera and southeast Alaska) relative to North America. The samples studied are fr
Publikováno v:
Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth. 100:12573-12588
A sequence of volcanic!astic sedimentary and pyroclastic rocks of Permian age (late Leonardian or early Guadalupian; =260 Ma) in the Wallowa terrane of Oregon and Idaho has been sampled for paleomagnetic study. Forty-six sites (222 cores) were collec
Autor:
Charles L. Powell, Andrei M. Sarna-Wojcicki, Kristin McDougall, John W. Hillhouse, Shannon A. Mahan, Elmira Wan
Publikováno v:
Open-File Report.
Autor:
John W. Hillhouse
Publikováno v:
Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems. 11
[1] New paleomagnetic results from mid-Tertiary sedimentary beds in the Santa Monica Mountains reinforce the evidence for large-scale rotation of the western Transverse Ranges, and anisotropy measurements indicate that compaction-induced inclination