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Reynolds et al. 1986
Reynolds, R.L., Hudson, M.R. and Hon, K. (1986). Paleomagnetic evidence for the timing of collapse and resurgence of the Lake City Caldera, San Juan Mountains, Colorado. Journal of Geophysical Research 91: doi: 10.1029/JB091iB09p09599. issn: 0148-0227.

Rocks of the 23.1-m.y.-old Lake City caldera consist of the compositionally zoned Sunshine Peak Tuff, postcollapse intracaldera lava flows, and resurgent quartz syenite intrusions. Declinations of reversely magnetized (I=-45¿ to -75¿) Sunshine Peak Tuff change from easterly (D=93¿-130¿) throughout most of the tuff to southerly (D=195¿-207¿) within the late eruptive phases. The postcollapse lava flows are also reversely magnetized, and their emplacement appears to have spanned resurgence of the caldera. In contrast, the uppermost levels of the resurgent intrusion record two distinct components of magnetization : a reversed component isolated by thermal demagnetization typically at temperatures greater than 400¿C and a normal component defined by thermal demagnetization at lower temperatures. A baked-contact test implies that emplacement and initial cooling of the intrusion occurred during a time of reversed polarity and that continued cooling at lower blocking temperatures took place during normal polarity. Assuming that the reversed directions of the extrusive and intrusive rocks record a single period of reversed polarity as suggested by the paleomagnetic and radiometric age data, the time for caldera development (from eruption of the ash flow tuffs to emplacement of the resurgent intrusion) was less than about 300,000 years on the basis of best estimates of durations of reversed polarities in the early Miocene. The estimated 300,000-year time span for the development of the Lake City caldera is very close in duration to the radiometrically determined time spans of much younger (Pleistocene) calderas having similar dimensions and similar volumes of erupted material.

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