File:Andesite (Larch Mountain Andesite, Lower Pleistocene, 1.43 Ma; Larch Mountain Shield Volcano, Boring Volcanic Field, Oregon, USA) 1.jpg

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English: Andesite from the Pleistocene of Oregon, USA. (~11.9 cm across at its widest)

Andesite is an aphanitic, intermediate, extrusive igneous rock. It is a common type of lava at subduction zone volcanoes. The andesite shown above is a low-silica andesite from the Larch Mountain Shield Volcano in Oregon's Boring Volcanic Field.

The Boring Volcanic Field is named after the Boring Hills and the town of Boring, southeast of the city of Portland, Oregon. The Boring Hills are volcanic centers or piles of fluvial gravels. The volcanic field is pretty well defined based on surface outcrops, but there are also some buried vents and subsurface intrusions. The Boring Volcanic Field has scattered, isolated vents and vent clusters - most are monogenetic, but there are some polygenetic vents such as Mt. Scott and Highland Butte. These vents had longer-lived eruptions that typical Boring Volcanic Field eruptions. All edifices tapped the same magma source. The field dates from the Late Pliocene onward. The youngest vent in the field is 57 ka (= a cinder cone that was washed away by Missoula floods, leaving a volcanic plug - Beacon Rock). Accurately dating Boring Volcanic Field samples has been problematic due to fine-grained groundmass and excess argon.

There is a diversity of lithologies in the field - a tremendous compositional variety. Some Boring Volcanic Field basalts are arc-like and some are not arc-like, based on different barium/niobium ratios (Ba/Nb). Mid-ocean ridge-like basalts are present in the field - low-potassium tholeiites. They look like mid-ocean ridge basalts at slow-spreading ridges. There are some calc-alkaline lavas in the Boring Volcanic Field as well - some are very enriched in potassium (arc-related lavas - high-K calc-alkaline basalts).

The Boring Volcanic Field occurs west of the axis of the Cascade Range (= north-south trending chain of active and potentially active subduction zone stratovolcanoes in northern California, Oregon, Washington State, and British Columbia). Something anomalous brought magma here, but the volcanic compositions are generally the same as in the Cascade Range proper, so the field is still subduction-related. There might be a discontinuity or a tear in the subducting slab that may account for the field's location. Small vent/edifice sizes in the field imply that magma rose upward quickly. Magma may have moved upward along extensional fractures, formed as a result of Juan de Fuca Plate subduction not being orthogonal with the North American Plate. This has produced transpressional and transtensional features. Subduction has been occurring in this area for ~40 million years.

Age: lower Lower Pleistocene, 1.43 Ma

Locality: roadcut along the southern side of Larch Mountain Road, western flanks of the Larch Mountain Shield Volcano, Boring Volcanic Field, Multnomah County, northwestern Oregon, USA (~45° 32' 15.43" North latitude, ~112° 06' 50.6" West longitude)
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Source https://www.flickr.com/photos/47445767@N05/25798556693/
Author James St. John

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This image was originally posted to Flickr by James St. John at https://flickr.com/photos/47445767@N05/25798556693. It was reviewed on 19 June 2022 by FlickreviewR 2 and was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the cc-by-2.0.

19 June 2022

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current08:32, 19 June 2022Thumbnail for version as of 08:32, 19 June 20222,813 × 2,481 (3.02 MB)Ser Amantio di Nicolao (talk | contribs)Uploaded a work by James St. John from https://www.flickr.com/photos/47445767@N05/25798556693/ with UploadWizard

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