Deposits of Bishop Tuff in this area cover nearly 2,200 km2 (850 sq mi), and are as thick as 200 m (660 ft).[5]
The Owens River cuts through the Volcanic Tableland, an ignimbrite plateau which is a principal sector of the Bishop Tuff outflow sheet. Erosion of the plateau by the Owens River has carved the Owens River Gorge.[6]: 2
Lithology
The Bishop Tuff is a high-silicate rhyolitic welded tuff, made up of ash and pumice clasts. The main minerals found in the pumice clasts are biotite, plagioclase, quartz, and sanidine. The main composition is SiO2 (73.4-77.9%),[3] followed by Al2O3 (12.7%).[7]
The Bishop Tuff is compositionally zoned. The lower section, formed from ash fall, is notated by pyroxene-free high-silica rhyolite pumice. The upper section, formed by pyroclastic flow, is notated by pyroxene-bearing high-silica rhyolite pumice.[8][9] The magma that formed the Bishop Tuff is suggested to be a "residual magma derived from some parental magma and not itself a primary or parental partial melt of common crustal rocks".[7]
^Crowley, J.L.; Schoene, B.; Bowring, S.A. (December 2007). "U-Pb dating of zircon in the Bishop Tuff at the millennial scale". Geology. 35 (12): 1123–1126. Bibcode:2007Geo....35.1123C. doi:10.1130/G24017A.1.