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Yoshida 1984
Yoshida, T. (1984). Tertiary Ishizuchi Cauldron, southwestern Japan arc: Formation by ring fracture subsidence. Journal of Geophysical Research 89: doi: 10.1029/JB080i010p08502. issn: 0148-0227.

The Tertiary Ishizuchi Cauldron, in the Setouchi volcanic belt of Miocene age in northwestern Shikoku, is 7--8 km in diameter and includes outer and inner ring fractures, inward dipping welted tuffs, central plutons, and ring fault complexes. Andesitic to dacitic welded tuffs within the central subsided block demonstrate repeated explosive activity during evolution of the cauldron. Inward dips of rings fractures surrounding the cauldron indicate that the bounding faults have the form of an upward opening cone. The cone shape is substantiated by peripheral upturning of intracaldera welding tuffs downdropped against the encircling ring faults. The ring faults complexes consist of rhyolitic to andesitic composite dikes, as well as intrusive tuffs and breccias from which some of the adjacent pyroclastic volcanic deposits were probably erupted. Central plutons of porphyritic granodiorite and fine-grained adamellite were intruded about 14 Ma ago, have walls dipping outward and flat roofs, and may have formed concave-upward tabular bodies which pass downward into ring dikes and upward into resurgent domes. Many Valles-type calderas including Ishizuchi Caldron are located in the area where the direction of the maximum horizontal compression of regional orign is parallel to arc structure in the middle Miocene southwestern Japan arc.

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Journal of Geophysical Research
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American Geophysical Union
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