| Abstract: | Rocks in the western half of the Hailey 1
??
2
?
quadrangle
of south-central Idaho include various units of the Atlanta lobe
of the Idaho batholith (biotite granodiorite to two-mica granite)
of Cretaceous age and plutons and dikes of Tertiary (Eocene to
Miocene) age that intrude the batholith. Eocene plutonic rocks
consist of a bimodal suite of anorogenic granite and tonalite-granodiorite
and hypabyssal rhyolite and rhyodacite dikes. Rocks
of the Eocene Challis Volcanics are scarce in the map area but
are widespread to the east. Rhyolite ash flows of the Miocene
Idavada Volcanics and basalt of the Snake River Plain crop out
in the southern part of the area. Lacustrine rocks of probable
Eocene to Holocene age are present in the vicinity of Anderson
Ranch Reservoir. Quaternary basalts and gravels are widespread
on the South Fork of the Boise River, and alluvial deposits
are common along active drainages. Metasedimentary rocks
of unknown age crop out on House Mountain, Chimney Peak,
and on the ridges east of Anderson Ranch Reservoir.
Older structures in the Idaho batholith include a major fault
beneath House Mountain that may be a decollement for one of
the large thrust sheets in eastern Idaho or part of an extensional
core complex. The southern part of the Atlanta lobe of the Idaho
batholith is cut by northeast-striking faults (parallel with the
Trans-Challis fault system) that are related to Eocene extension
and by northwest-oriented faults that formed during basin and
range extension in the Miocene. The basin and range faults have
prominent scarps typical of basin and range topography. The
combination of northeast and northwest faults has broken the
batholith into a series of rhomboid blocks. Some of these northeast
and northwest faults are older structures that were reactivated
in the Eocene or Miocene, as indicated by Ar
40
/Ar
39
dates
on mineralized rock contained in some of the structures.
The Idaho batholith and associated rocks in the map area
host several hundred mines and prospects in 18 mining districts.
The deposits range in age from Cretaceous to Eocene, and many
were developed for precious metals. Most of the deposits are in
quartz veins in shear zones in granitic rocks of the batholith.
Several districts were actively being explored for low-grade,
bulk-minable, precious-metal deposits in the late 1980s and
early 1990s. |
| Genre: | USGS Numbered Series |
| ProdID: | 33092 |
| Citation Author: | Bennett, Earl H. |
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| Citation Language: | ENGLISH |
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| Citation Phsyical Description: | 39 p. |
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| Citation Series: | Bulletin |
| Citation Series Code: | B |
| Citation Series Number: | 2064-W |
| Citation Search Results Text: | The geology and mineral deposits of part of the western half of the Hailey 1 degree x 2 degrees quadrangle, Idaho; with sections on the Neal mining district and the Dixie mining district; 2001; B; 2064-W; Bennett, Earl H. |
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| Citation Year: | 2001 |
| Type: | citation/reference |
| Text: | The geology and mineral deposits of part of the western half of the Hailey 1 degree x 2 degrees quadrangle, Idaho; with sections on the Neal mining district and the Dixie mining district; 2001; B; 2064-W; Bennett, Earl H. |
| URL (THUMBNAIL): | http://pubs.er.usgs.gov/thumbnails/usgs_thumb.jpg |
| URL (INDEX PAGE): | http://pubs.usgs.gov/bul/b2064-w/ |
| Date Other: | Sun, 1 Jul 2001 00:00 -0500 |
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