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Earth Sciences

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Portland State University

2020

Flood basalts -- Oregon

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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Distribution, Geochronology, And Petrogenesis Of The Picture Gorge Basalt With Special Focus On Petrological Relationships To The Main Columbia River Basalt Group, Emily Bogdan Cahoon Aug 2020

Distribution, Geochronology, And Petrogenesis Of The Picture Gorge Basalt With Special Focus On Petrological Relationships To The Main Columbia River Basalt Group, Emily Bogdan Cahoon

Dissertations and Theses

The Columbia River Basalt Group (CRBG) is the youngest and volumetrically smallest continental flood basalt exposed across the Pacific Northwest, USA. Similar to other large igneous provinces, the majority of material erupted during the initial 1 million years of activity, these lavas are subdivided into four main-phase units. The Picture Gorge Basalt (PGB) is the only main-phase unit of the CRBG whose age is not precisely known and understanding of PGB petrogenesis is largely based on a limited number of samples when compared with other main-phase units. It is suggested that a time gap of over 0.5 myr existed between …


Reshuffling The Columbia River Basalt Chronology — Picture Gorge Basalt, The Earliest- And Longest-Erupting Formation, Emily B. Cahoon, Martin J. Streck, Anthony A.P. Koppers, Daniel P. Miggins Jan 2020

Reshuffling The Columbia River Basalt Chronology — Picture Gorge Basalt, The Earliest- And Longest-Erupting Formation, Emily B. Cahoon, Martin J. Streck, Anthony A.P. Koppers, Daniel P. Miggins

Geology Faculty Publications and Presentations

The Columbia River Basalt Group (CRBG) is the world’s youngest continental flood basalt province, presumably sourced from the deep-seated plume that currently resides underneath Yellowstone National Park in the northwestern United States. The earliest-erupted basalts from this province aid in understanding and modeling plume impingement and the subsequent evolution of basaltic volcanism. We explore the Picture Gorge Basalt (PGB) formation of the CRBG, and discuss the location and geochemical significance in a temporal context of early CRBG magmatism. We report new ARGUS-VI multicollector 40Ar/39Ar incremental heating ages from known PGB localities and additional outcrops that we can geochemically classify as …


Geochemical Response To Thermal Energy Storage In The Columbia River Basalt Aquifer System Beneath The Portland Basin, Oregon, Ellen Elizabeth Svadlenak Jan 2020

Geochemical Response To Thermal Energy Storage In The Columbia River Basalt Aquifer System Beneath The Portland Basin, Oregon, Ellen Elizabeth Svadlenak

Dissertations and Theses

Deep direct use thermal energy storage (TES) is a low carbon emission method of geothermal energy storage and supply for large-scale residential, commercial, and manufacturing heating and cooling. The process entails repeated cycles of hot- or cold-water injection, storage, and extraction from slow groundwater flow zones within the deeper layers of an aquifer system. Though a promising technology, TES cycles may increase mineral dissolution and precipitation reactions, particularly at elevated temperatures. The ensuing mass transfer can form scale in heat exchange systems and alter aquifer porosity and permeability, processes that can reduce the operational efficiency of a TES system.

Within …