Pyroclastic deposits that record subduction-related volcanism in the Cascadia Forearc are exposed at Chimacum Rock, located on the northeast corner of the Olympic Peninsula near Port Townsend. Although not yet dated, stratigraphic constraints indicate the rocks are Eocene in age. The exposed section is about 90 m thick, suggesting that it was deposited within topographic constraints such as a paleovalley. Most of the section is massive and nearly monolithologic, characterized by angular clasts of hornblende dacite up to one meter in diameter in a fine-grained matrix. However, at the base of the exposed section is a stratified sand...