Watch the Dallas Symposium LIVE, and fundraiser auction
Ticket proceeds support mindat.org! - click here...
Log InRegister
Quick Links : The Mindat ManualThe Rock H. Currier Digital LibraryMindat Newsletter [Free Download]
Home PageAbout MindatThe Mindat ManualHistory of MindatCopyright StatusWho We AreContact UsAdvertise on Mindat
Donate to MindatCorporate SponsorshipSponsor a PageSponsored PagesMindat AdvertisersAdvertise on Mindat
Learning CenterWhat is a mineral?The most common minerals on earthInformation for EducatorsMindat ArticlesThe ElementsThe Rock H. Currier Digital LibraryGeologic Time
Minerals by PropertiesMinerals by ChemistryAdvanced Locality SearchRandom MineralRandom LocalitySearch by minIDLocalities Near MeSearch ArticlesSearch GlossaryMore Search Options
Search For:
Mineral Name:
Locality Name:
Keyword(s):
 
The Mindat ManualAdd a New PhotoRate PhotosLocality Edit ReportCoordinate Completion ReportAdd Glossary Item
Mining CompaniesStatisticsUsersMineral MuseumsClubs & OrganizationsMineral Shows & EventsThe Mindat DirectoryDevice SettingsThe Mineral Quiz
Photo SearchPhoto GalleriesSearch by ColorNew Photos TodayNew Photos YesterdayMembers' Photo GalleriesPast Photo of the Day GalleryPhotography

Symons, D. T.A., Smith, T. E., Kawasaki, K., Walawender, M. J. (2009) Paleomagnetism of the mid-Cretaceous gem-bearing pegmatite dikes of San Diego County, California, USA. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 46 (9) 675-687 doi:10.1139/e09-035

Advanced
   -   Only viewable:
Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitlePaleomagnetism of the mid-Cretaceous gem-bearing pegmatite dikes of San Diego County, California, USA
JournalCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences
AuthorsSymons, D. T.A.Author
Smith, T. E.Author
Kawasaki, K.Author
Walawender, M. J.Author
Year2009 (September)Volume46
Issue9
PublisherCanadian Science Publishing
DOIdoi:10.1139/e09-035Search in ResearchGate
Generate Citation Formats
Mindat Ref. ID484536Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:484536:6
GUID0
Full ReferenceSymons, D. T.A., Smith, T. E., Kawasaki, K., Walawender, M. J. (2009) Paleomagnetism of the mid-Cretaceous gem-bearing pegmatite dikes of San Diego County, California, USA. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 46 (9) 675-687 doi:10.1139/e09-035
Plain TextSymons, D. T.A., Smith, T. E., Kawasaki, K., Walawender, M. J. (2009) Paleomagnetism of the mid-Cretaceous gem-bearing pegmatite dikes of San Diego County, California, USA. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 46 (9) 675-687 doi:10.1139/e09-035
In(2009, September) Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences Vol. 46 (9) Canadian Science Publishing
Abstract/Notes Pegmatite dikes in the Peninsular Ranges batholith of southwestern California have produced spectacular crystals of semiprecious and precious minerals for over a century. Aside from their economic importance, these dikes straddle a major tectonic boundary and were used to test hypotheses related to the timing and development of this composite batholith. Paleomagnetic analysis of 252 specimens from 20 sites (12 and 8 sites in the western and eastern zones of the batholith, respectively, from 11 mines in five dike districts) isolated a stable characteristic remanent magnetization direction at 19 sites. The site mean directions for the western and eastern zones are statistically indistinguishable at 95% confidence, supporting petrologic and geochemical arguments that the dikes of the two zones are coeval and cogenetic. After correction for the Neogene opening of the Gulf of California, the paleopole for all 19 site mean directions is indistinguishable from the 94 Ma reference paleopole for North America and supports hypotheses that (1) the dikes are genetically related to intrusion of the La Posta-type plutons; (2) the batholith was already assembled beside the northwestern coastline of Mexico at 94 Ma; (3) ENE-side-up tilting of fault blocks in the batholith’s western zone ended by ∼94 Ma; and (4) the far-sided and clockwise-rotated discordant paleopoles found commonly in Late Cretaceous and younger sedimentary rocks of the batholith’s region are mostly the result of inclination-flattening of the remanence and (or) remagnetization by fluid flow, creating a secondary remanence, excluding Neogene tectonic rotations.


See Also

These are possibly similar items as determined by title/reference text matching only.

 
and/or  
Mindat.org is an outreach project of the Hudson Institute of Mineralogy, a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization.
Copyright © mindat.org and the Hudson Institute of Mineralogy 1993-2025, except where stated. Most political location boundaries are © OpenStreetMap contributors. Mindat.org relies on the contributions of thousands of members and supporters. Founded in 2000 by Jolyon Ralph.
To cite: Ralph, J., Von Bargen, D., Martynov, P., Zhang, J., Que, X., Prabhu, A., Morrison, S. M., Li, W., Chen, W., & Ma, X. (2025). Mindat.org: The open access mineralogy database to accelerate data-intensive geoscience research. American Mineralogist, 110(6), 833–844. doi:10.2138/am-2024-9486.
Privacy Policy - Terms & Conditions - Contact Us / DMCA issues - Report a bug/vulnerability Current server date and time: August 15, 2025 04:09:22
Go to top of page