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Title: Stratigraphic and structural characteristics of volcanic rocks in core hole USW G-4, Yucca Mountain, Nye County, Nevada

Technical Report ·
OSTI ID:59676

Detailed stratigraphic and structural studies, performed in connection with the Nevada Nuclear Waste Storage Investigations program, have been in progress since 1978. The purpose of these studies is to characterize volcanic rocks underlying Yucca Mountain - a volcanic highland situated along the western boundary of the Nevada Test Site in southern Nye county, Nevada. Core hole USW G-4 was cored fom 41 ft to a depth of 3001 ft at a location about 300 ft southwest of the porposed site of an exploratory shaft that will be used for in situ studies of the geotechnical, geologic, and hydrologic characteristics of rock in the unsaturated zone to aid in evaluating the suitability of Yucca Mountain for storage of high-level nuclear waste. The primary objectives of this study were to (1) verify that geologic conditions are similar to those identified in nearby boreholes and (2) determine geologic and geophysical characteristics for use in the design and construction phases of the exploratory shaft. Stratigraphic section in core hole USW G-4 is composed entirely of thick sequences of ash-flow tuff that are separated by fine- to coarse-grained ash-fall tuff and tuffaceous sediments. All rocks are of Tertiary age and vary in composition from rhyolitic to quartz latitic. Major stratigraphic units include the Paintbrush Tuff, tuffaceous beds of Calico Hills, and Crater Flat Tuff. All four members of the Paintbrush Tuff were identified in USW G-4. In descending order, the members are: Tiva Canyon, Yucca Mountain, Pah Canyon, and Topopah Spring. The Tiva Canyon and Topopah Spring Members are dominantly densely welded and devitrified, except for the basal part of the Tiva Canyon and upper and lower parts of the Topopah Spring where the rock is non- to partially welded and vitric. In contrast, the Yucca Mountain and Pah Canyon Members are entirely non-to partially welded and vitric. They represent the distal edges of ash-flow tuffs that thicken to the north and northwest.

Research Organization:
US Geological Survey, Denver, CO (United States)
DOE Contract Number:
AI08-78ET44802
OSTI ID:
59676
Report Number(s):
USGS-OFR-84-789; ON: DE85007094
Resource Relation:
Other Information: PBD: 1984
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English