Nez Perce Creek Flow (Middle Pleistocene, ~152 ka; Firehole Canyon roadcut, Yellowstone, Wyoming, USA) 22 : 無料・フリー素材/写真
Nez Perce Creek Flow (Middle Pleistocene, ~152 ka; Firehole Canyon roadcut, Yellowstone, Wyoming, USA) 22 / James St. John
ライセンス | クリエイティブ・コモンズ 表示 2.1 |
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説明 | Rhyolite in the Pleistocene of Wyoming, USA.Rhyolite is a felsic, aphanitic, extrusive igneous rock - it's one of many specific types of lava produced by volcanoes. Rhyolite is generally light-colored and finely-crystalline. When molten, it almost always has a high viscosity - it is thick and sticky, almost like toothpaste. Sometimes, rhyolitic lava cools into glass (obsidian) or glass with scattered crystals (vitrophyre). Some explosive volcanic eruptions consist of rhyolite ash, which is finely-pulverized rock, or rhyolitic pumice, which is light-weight and frothy-textured, with numerous tiny holes that were originally gas bubbles.Seen here is a Pleistocene-aged, rhyolite lava flow in Yellowstone, Wyoming. Yellowstone is a hotspot volcano that has occasional enormous explosive ash eruptions. After the last one, about 640,000 years ago, smaller-scale volcanism has occurred at Yellowstone - some involving dark-colored basaltic lava flows and some involving light-colored rhyolitic lava flows. This example is the Nez Perce Creek Flow, which consists of rhyolites dating to about 152,000 years ago.Stratigraphy: Nez Perce Creek Flow, Central Plateau Member, Plateau Rhyolite, upper Middle Pleistocene, ~152 ka (dates range from 148 to 160 ka)Locality: roadcut on the eastern side of Firehole Canyon Drive, Yellowstone, northwestern Wyoming, USA |
撮影日 | 2023-06-14 14:10:28 |
撮影者 | James St. John |
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