The Columbia River Basalt Group is the youngest and most thoroughly studied flood-basalt province known; information about it should be relevant to questions about the possible relation of flood-basalt volcanism to mass extinctions. The group has a total volume of about 174,000 cu km and covers an area of about 164,000 sq km. It was erupted between 17.5 and 6 Ma, as measured by K-Ar and Ar-40/Ar-39 dates. Early eruptions formed the Imnaha Basalt. More than 85 percent of the group was produced during a 1.5 my period between 17 and 15.5 Ma, forming the Grande Ronde and greatly subordinate Picture Gorge Basalts. Later flows formed the Wanapum Basalt, which includes the well-known Roza Member, and the Saddle Mountains Basalt. Linear vent system...
The Columbia River Basalt Group is the youngest continental flood basalt province in the world and c...
Lavas belonging to the Grande Ronde Formation (GRB) constitute about 63% of the Columbia River Basal...
Examination of maar-type volcanic cones, including tuff rings, from more than 40 localities in weste...
Miocene rhyolitic volcanism of eastern Oregon, USA, can be divided into two main episodes. Mantle pl...
The Columbia Plateau is surrounded by a complex assemblage of highly deformed Precambrian to lower T...
Continental flood basalt provinces are the subaerial expression of large igneous province volcanism....
The Columbia River Basalt Group (CRBG) is the world’s youngest continental flood basalt province, pr...
Approximately 16 km of Columbia River basalt are exposed in the Salmon River area to the south and t...
A chronology of initiation dates of the major continental flood basalt episodes has been established...
The Wanapum Basalt consists of at least 36 flows subdivided into 5 members and constitute ~5% of the...
Grande Ronde Basalt (GRB) lavas represent the most voluminous eruptive pulse of the Columbia River-S...
Basaltic volcanism in the form of small-volume, subaerial and subaqueous eruptions have occurred in ...
The temporal link between mass extinctions and large igneous provinces is well known. Here, we exami...
[1] The Columbia River flood basalts include some of the world’s largest individual lava flows, most...
Columbia River province magmatism is now known to include abundant and widespread rhyolite centers e...
The Columbia River Basalt Group is the youngest continental flood basalt province in the world and c...
Lavas belonging to the Grande Ronde Formation (GRB) constitute about 63% of the Columbia River Basal...
Examination of maar-type volcanic cones, including tuff rings, from more than 40 localities in weste...
Miocene rhyolitic volcanism of eastern Oregon, USA, can be divided into two main episodes. Mantle pl...
The Columbia Plateau is surrounded by a complex assemblage of highly deformed Precambrian to lower T...
Continental flood basalt provinces are the subaerial expression of large igneous province volcanism....
The Columbia River Basalt Group (CRBG) is the world’s youngest continental flood basalt province, pr...
Approximately 16 km of Columbia River basalt are exposed in the Salmon River area to the south and t...
A chronology of initiation dates of the major continental flood basalt episodes has been established...
The Wanapum Basalt consists of at least 36 flows subdivided into 5 members and constitute ~5% of the...
Grande Ronde Basalt (GRB) lavas represent the most voluminous eruptive pulse of the Columbia River-S...
Basaltic volcanism in the form of small-volume, subaerial and subaqueous eruptions have occurred in ...
The temporal link between mass extinctions and large igneous provinces is well known. Here, we exami...
[1] The Columbia River flood basalts include some of the world’s largest individual lava flows, most...
Columbia River province magmatism is now known to include abundant and widespread rhyolite centers e...
The Columbia River Basalt Group is the youngest continental flood basalt province in the world and c...
Lavas belonging to the Grande Ronde Formation (GRB) constitute about 63% of the Columbia River Basal...
Examination of maar-type volcanic cones, including tuff rings, from more than 40 localities in weste...