GSOC FIELD TRIPS, etc.

Fellow GSOC members:  Here is a page I have created to show you some of the pictures I have taken on GSOC field trips and geology related travelling.  Enjoy the shows!

Carol Hasenberg

NOTES ON VIEWING SLIDE SHOWS --
My new improved slide shows start automatically. You can move around in the show by clicking the thumbnail of interest and pause the show by clicking the pause control. You can also click on the pictures manually to see the show.  To get back to this page, just click the "back" button on your browser.  Enjoy!

Also, my shows are created with the shareware program JAlbum with a BananAlbum skin.  It is an awesome little program!  I suggest you check it out (and don't forget to give them a little donation if you like it).

QUICK INDEX TO TRIPS BELOW
2009 WWW FT
2009 PREZ FT
2008  PREZ FT
2007 PREZ FT
2008 OUTBACK/LAKE CO. & OTHER SMALL TRIPS

2009 GSOC FIELD TRIPS

2009 Waste, Wind and Water Field Trip

View slide show of the trip
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2009 President's Field Trip - “Geology and Hydrology of the Oregon High Cascades and Deschutes Basin”

View slide show of Day 1
View slide show of Day 2
View slide show of Day 3
View slide show of Day 4
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2008 GSOC PRESIDENT'S FIELD TRIP - MINING HISTORY AND MORE IN OREGON'S BLUE MOUNTAINS
Howdy GSOC pardners!  Read on to see some interesting maps and slide shows from the 2008 GSOC President's field trip.  Special thanks for this year's President Janet Rasmussen for putting this trip together - it was real fun!

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Reference geological map of the Baker City area has been constructed from the Oregon Geologic Data Compilation project of the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries (DOGAMI) in cooperation with Portland State University.


2008 GSOC PRESIDENT'S FIELD TRIP - MINING HISTORY AND MORE IN OREGON'S BLUE MOUNTAINS

Part 2 - Baker City, September 5-9

This part of the trip focused on Oregon's gold mining past and also the tectonic setting of the region. 

Day 1, September 5, emphasized setting the historical background for the participants by visiting the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center just outside Baker City, listening to a lecture given by former state geologist Howard Brooks on the history of gold mining in the area, visiting the Baker Heritage Museum and other Baker City historical sites.

In the late afternoon Eastern Oregon University geologist Jay Van Tassel took the GSOC group behind the Always Welcome Inn to sift some of the sediments for tiny fossils of the Pliocene era.  Apparently the layers are part of a fluvial/pluvial environment dating about 4.8-4.3 million years in age and yield fossils of small mammals, amphibians, reptiles, fish, birds and plants of the era.

Refer to the slide show below and the October 2008 Geological Newsletter for more information on these activities.

See slide show of Day 1. (Since this link opens a new browser window, just close the window when done viewing the show.  You can toggle between the maps on this page and the slide show.)


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Day 2 - Gold Mining in the Sumpter Area

The two maps to the right show images of the town of Sumpter from Google Maps.  The first topography image shows the location of Sumpter with respect to Baker City.  Below that is a satellite image of Sumpter which shows the extent of the dredge spoils in Sumpter at a larger scale.  As you can see, the gold dredge worked an area about 10 miles long and about 1 mile at the widest.  The topsoil was washed away or buried under the larger rocks in the gold dredging operation.  The gold dredge in Sumpter represents the third and final stage of mining in the valley.  Prior to dredging, miners used panning and sluicing to extract gold from placer (erosional) deposits, then mined the lodes from their original vein emplacements.  When those methods failed to be profitable, the more efficient dredge was used to extract 50 to 95% of the placer gold in the valley.

Mercury was used to amalgamate the gold in the dredging operation.  Being heavy, mercury spills would sink to the bottom of the spoils and possibly work their way to the lowest points in the valley.  A wise precaution would be to educate oneself on the toxic hazards before using the valley water or disturbing the dredge spoils.

The town of Sumpter was in its heyday just around the turn of the 20th Century.  The gold dredges operated from 1913 to 1954.  Sumpter never really recovered from a 1917 fire and now is a small and sleepy town on the Elkhorn Mountains Scenic Byway (see http://www.oregon.com/byways/).

The GSOC schedule included a tour of the remaining gold dredge at the Sumpter Valley Dredge State Heritage Area and a ride on the Sumpter Valley Railway, which passes through the heart of the dredge spoils.

For more information about historic Sumpter see the following websites:
Sumpter Valley Railway: http://www.svry.com/
Historic Sumpter: http://www.historicsumpter.com/sumpter-oregon-sumpter-valley-ry.html
Sumpter Valley Dredge State Heritage Area: http://www.oregonstateparks.org/park_239.php
Friends of the Dredge, Inc.: http://www.friendsofthedredge.com/

See slide show of Day 2.
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Day 3 -  Geological formations in the Snake River Canyon.

Reference geological map of the Snake River Canyon trip has been constructed from the Oregon Geologic Data Compilation project of the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries (DOGAMI) in cooperation with Portland State University.  The topo map referenced below has been constructed using a Google Maps base.

On this trip led by DOGAMI Regional Geologist Mark Ferns, the GSOC group travelled through and observed the Huntington and Weatherby Formations of the Olds Ferry/Izee Terrane, and the Nelson marble of the Baker Terrane.  The Olds Ferry/Izee Terrane was described by Ferns as being created in a forearc environment, with the Huntington being a deep water volcanic formation and the Weatherby a shallow water marine depositional formation.  The Nelson marble of the Baker Terrane was deposited in deep water and later deformed.  In Stop #1 (S1 on the maps) the GSOC group observed intrusions into the Weatherby Formation, in Stop #2 the Huntington Formation, and Stop #3 was the contact between the Huntington and Weatherby.  In Stop # 4 we broke for lunch.  Stop #5 was to observe fine grained sediments from the Weatherby.  Stop #6 was the Weatherby/Baker boundary at the Connor Creek Fault.  Stop #7 included two short stops to observe radiolarian chert and pillow basalts in the Baker Terrane.  Stop #8 was to observe the Hole-in-the-Wall Landslide.

One of the many info bits related by Mark Ferns on this trip was that the terranes in this area of Oregon were originally named because of their mineral associations.  Neither the Huntington or Weatherby formations contain gold - copper, zinc, and silver are the minerals found in these formations.  Gold, copper, and zinc are to be found in the Wallowa terrane to the north and gold can also be found in the Baker terrane to the north (see geological map to the right).

Another important bit is that this area along the Snake River also is the southern portion of Columbia River basalt dike swarms from the Miocene era.  So, the group frequently found basalt intruding through the basement rocks described above.

See slide show of Day 3.


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GSnakeR/topomap_snake_icon.jpg          For a topo reference map of the Snake River trip, click this thumbnail.
It has been converted to Acrobat format (*.pdf) for scalability.

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The Hole-in-the-Wall Landslide can easily be seen on the Google Maps satellite image.



Day 4 - Town of Granite tour, Fremont Power Station, and the Tower Mountain Caldera

The last day of the 2008 GSOC field trip began with a very interesting tour of the old mining town of Granite by GSOC members Bo and Marija Janko.  The Janko's have owned their house built in 1895 since 1978.  It was built to house a stage coach station, and the Jankos have made it a very cozy cottage.  Another GSOC member, Arthur Springer, met the Jankos in Granite in the summer of 1986.  Arthur has done some gold panning in the area, amongst other pursuits.  Both parties were there at the tour, and showed the GSOC party the old dance hall, grocery store, city hall, drug store, and cemetery.  See the Google Maps satellite image of Granite below with key items labelled.

After the tour, GSOC'ers headed to the old Fremont Power Station, several miles southwest of Granite.  The old powerhouse is now a museum, and caretaker Mitch Fielding gave the group an excellent tour of the facility, which included technical explanations of the works and  even a ghost story of the place.  Apparently a command Sargeant Major of the powerhouse, who had died nearby of a heart attack, moved his favorite hat outside of the structure to the doorstoop one day.  The hat hangs on the wall of the powerhouse now in memorial.  The power provided by the station was used by local mines and the Sumpter valley dredges.  The concrete masonry station was built in 1908 and closed in 1967.  The structure lost its original roof in 1999 from excessive snow loading.  Olive Lake, 8 miles from the station, provided the water that ran the turbine to generate the power.

After the powerhouse tour and a short picnic, the GSOC group then headed north on Forest Service route 52 from the town of Granite, following (in reverse order) the "Ukiah to Granite Geology Field Trip Guide" brochure published jointly by the USDA, DOGAMI, and the Umatilla National Forest.  The group stopped at stops 9, 5, 4, and 3 from the brochure (labelled S9, S5, S4, and S3 on the topo map).  The group first stops at the Chinese Walls, which were erected as Chinese miners sifted through the dredge spoils to more efficiently extract the gold.  The road later passes through the Paleogene Tower Mountain caldera, which is clearly visible on the Google Maps satellite image (see below).

The GSOC group disbanded at S3, the North Fork of the John Day River overlook.  The author made her way back to Portland by continuing on the Blue Mountain Scenic Byway to Heppner, the seat of Morrow County, and north to I-84.  A few of the slides in the show below show scenes from this road, which is also very geologically interesting and scenic.

See slide show of Day 4.
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GGranite/Ukiahmap_icon.jpg          For a geologic reference map of the Granite/Tower Mountain trip, click this thumbnail. 
The map is from the "Ukiah to Granite Geology Field Trip Guide" published jointly by the USDA, DOGAMI, and the Umatilla National Forest.
You can view or download the actual US Forest Service pamphlet acrobat file by clicking this link http://www.fs.fed.us/r6/uma/maps/UG2.pdf.

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2007 GSOC PRESIDENT'S FIELD TRIP - KLAMATH MOUNTAINS

This trip was organized by President Richard Bartels - many thanks!

The first day of the trip, Friday, September 7, 2007, was led by Dr. Jad D’Allura, geology professor at Southern Oregon University (SOU), and a specialist in igneous and metamorphic petrology, amongst other research pursuits.  Dr. D’Allura took the GSOC party westward along the Klamath River in northern California to observe the metamorphic rock exposures in several terranes of the Klamath Mountains.  These included the Permian-Jurassic North Fork, Permian-Carboniferous Salmon River, Permian-Jurassic Eastern Hayfork, Permian-Jurassic Western Hayfork, Permian-Jurassic Marble Mountain, and Jurassic Condrey Mountain terranes.  All of these terranes are included in the Western Paleozoic and Triassic Belt.

The oldest of the terranes is the Salmon River (primarily basalts) which formed the basement for the Eastern Hayfork and North Fork terranes.  The Marble Mountain and Western Hayfork Terranes represent an accretionary wedge (mélange) and a volcanic arc.  The assembly of these terranes began in Late Middle Jurassic times with westward thrusting with associated deformation and metamorphism.  Plutonic bodies intruded into the terranes and across their boundaries, and are thus referred to as “stitching plutons”.  These intrusions occurred in Early Late Jurassic time and mark the latest possible assembly of the Western Paleozoic and Triassic Belt.

In the late Jurassic, a major tectonic event underthrust the Condrey Mountain terrain beneath the other layers, which were now stacked over one another similarly to roof shingles (geologists use the term imbrication to describe this), and further deformed by metamorphism.  Later, in the Miocene, uplifting caused a dome structure in the Condrey Mountain terrane to rise past the other terrane layers to the surface.  Metamorphism is greatest in the Marble Mountain terrane, closest to the Condrey Mountain dome, and decreases toward the Salmon River terrane.  This doming during the Miocene also explains why the late Cretaceous Hornbrook formation dips to the northeast. This is the tie-in between the field trips taken on Friday and Saturday by the GSOC group.

The GSOC field trip observed the rocks in these terranes at Stops 1, 3, 4, 6, 7 and 7b of Dr. D’Allura’s “Geological Field Guide Along the Klamath River” (see reference below).  The terranes viewed were the North Fork at Stop 1, Eastern Hayfork at Stops 3 and 4, Marble Mountain at Stops 6 and 7b, and Condrey Mountain at Stops 7 and 7b.  The rocks observed at these locations included a large spectrum of metamorphic and intrusive examples.  Lower grade metamorphic rocks included dark argillite, greenstone, chert, and phyllite at Stops 1 and 3, and somewhat deformed and altered pillow basalts at Stop 4.  Stop 6 was dominated by higher grade amphibolite, a dark rock which sparkled with crystals of metamorphic minerals.  Stops 7 and 7b included graphitic schists and greenschists of the Condrey Mountain terrane as well as an example of retrograde metamorphism of ultramafic rock in the Marble Mountain terrane at the contact boundary.

Between stops Dr. D’Allura pointed out the changes in topography that accompanied moving from one terrane to another.  For example, between Stops 1 and 3 the party traveled through a rugged canyon whose narrow walls consisted of Salmon River terrane rocks.  As the field trip passed into the Eastern Hayfork terrane, the canyon widened and became less steep and rugged.

At Stop 6, in addition to the outcrop observation, the GSOC party went down to the Klamath River floodplain to observe the myriad variety of river cobbles and pebbles to be found there.  Examples of grano-diorite, quartzite, schist and marble cobbles, some with very large and interesting crystals, were to be found.

At the end of a hot afternoon of rock observation and sample collection, the GSOC party decided to make a Stop 8 at Quigley’s Market to relax in the shade on the patio, re-hydrate and prepare for Saturday’s trip.

See slide show of Day 1.

figure 1 Figure 1 from D'Allura 1990. Adapted from Irwin, W.P., 1972, "Terranes of the western Paleozoic and Triassic belt in the southern Klamath Mountains, California," in Geological Survey Research, 1072: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 800-C, p. C103-C111.
figure 2
Figure 2 from D'Allura 1990.


2007 GSOC PRESIDENT'S FIELD TRIP - KLAMATH MOUNTAINS

The following day, Saturday, September 8, 2007, the GSOC group was ably led by Dr. Bill Elliott, assistant professor of geology at SOU, and an expert in sedimentary petrology.  Dr. Elliott took the group on a route in the area near Hilt, California, to observe sedimentary rocks in several members of the Late Cretaceous Hornbrook, the Oligocene Colestin, and the Late Oligocene to Early Miocene Roxy Formations.  The Tertiary Colestin and Roxy Formations unconformably overlie the Hornbrook Formation in the Cottonwood Creek Valley of northern California and are part of the Western Cascades group.

The Hornbrook Formation, which consists of mainly marine clastic sediments (i.e., derived from the fragments of other rocks), are believed to be formed in a forearc basin in a subduction zone during the late Cretaceous.  (A forearc basin will be to the oceanic side of a volcanic arc in a subduction zone.)  The members of the Hornbrook Formation, all of which were viewed by the GSOC party, are the oldest unit, the Klamath River Conglomerate Member, which also has the only non-marine sediments, the Osburger Gulch Sandstone Member, the Ditch Creek Siltstone Member, the Rocky Gulch Sandstone Member, and the youngest Blue Gulch Mudstone Member.  Each of the members consist of alternating units of varying texture – the member names refer to their general characteristics.  The Hornbrook Formation was viewed in Stops 1-7 of the field trip, following the “Field Trip Guide to the Upper Cretaceous Hornbrook Formation and Cenozoic Rocks of southern Oregon and northern California” field trip guide which was written specifically for this trip by Dr. Elliott.

The highlights of the Hornbrook Formation seen by the group included fossil lenses of cephalopods, gastropods, and other marine fauna in the extremely hard matrix of the Osburger Gulch Sandstone, the beautiful arkosic sandstone matrix for the Klamath River Conglomerate, worm burrows in the Ditch Creek Siltstone, interesting turbulent depositional traits and composition of the conglomerates in the Rocky Gulch Sandstone, and the oddly solid Hilt Bed amongst the Blue Gulch Mudstone units.

The remaining Stops 8-11 contained material from the Colestin and Roxy Formations of the Western Cascades.  The Colestin Formation consists of volcanic arc material.  Layers of this formation were viewed at the top of Siskiyou Pass along I-5.  Volcanic tuffs, including vitric and crystal types, and volcanic sandstones were present.  Dikes with an assortment of clastic xenoliths cut through the layers.  Stop 9 included a landslide and Colestin conglomerates, and Stop 10 consisted of alternating lava flow and paleosol layers.  Stop 11 gave the group an opportunity to excavate some Metasequoia fossils from a whitish colored layer of mudrock in the Colestin.

After another hot day the group headed back to a little restaurant in Hilt.  Some of the members made plans to cap their interesting field trip days with further exploration of the area, including a trip to Oregon Caves.  This area of Oregon is a very interesting place to study geology.

References and Additional Reading

Orr, Elizabeth L., Orr, William N., and Baldwin, Ewart M., Geology of Oregon, Fourth Edition, Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company, Dubuque, Iowa, 1992.  Refer to the Klamath Mountains chapter pp. 51-78.

D’Allura, Jad Alan, “Geologic Field Guide Along the Klamath River; From Interstate 5 Near Hornbrook to Seiad Valley,” California Geology, March 1990, pp. 58-67.

Elliott, Bill, “Field Trip Guide to the Upper Cretaceous Hornbrook Formation and Cenozoic Rocks of southern Oregon and northern California,” Saturday, September 8, 2007.

SOU Geology Department:
Dr. D’Allura: http://www.sou.edu/geology/faculty/JDallura.htm
Dr. Elliott: http://www.sou.edu/geology/faculty/ElliottB.htm

See slide show of Day 2.

figure 5
Figure 5 from Elliott 2007 with my notes from the trip. This figure originated with Nilsen, T.H., 1984, "Stratigraphy, sedimentology, and tectonic framework of the Upper Cretaceous Hornbrook Formation, Oregon and California": Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists, Pacific Section, v. 42, p. 51-88.





OREGON OUTBACK GSOC FIELD TRIP 2008

Join GSOC President Janet Rasmussen, Vice President Carol Hasenberg, and other participant's for a show of this exciting trip! 

Special thanks to Richard Bartels and Beverly Vogt whose great planning made this one of the most enjoyable GSOC field trips ever!

Show designed and captioned by Carol Hasenberg.  Photos by Carol Hasenberg unless noted otherwise.

See Outback 2008 slide show.
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GREENLAND -- Land of Ice

Here are some unexpected shots of Greenland, Baffin Island, and the Canadian shield on the way home to PDX from Europe in October 2007.  Included is the best interpretation I can give of these features.

Slide show of Greenland
Greenland glacier


STEENS MOUNTAIN AND EASTERN OREGON

This is a trip my husband John and I took summer 2007.  We visited Christmas Valley and the Steens Mountain area.  Here I am at Crack in the Ground.

Slide show of Steens

Me and Crack