Abstract

ABSTRACT The lower part of the Wilkes Formation (uppermost Miocene) exposed along lower Salmon Creek in Lewis County, Washington, consists of volcaniclastic-dominated deposits. The section contains a stacked series of volcanic runout mudstone beds overlain by more distal runout mudstone beds, interlayered with carbonaceous mudstone and lignite-woodmat beds that are in turn overlain by poorly sorted volcaniclastic mudstone and sandstone. The section contains a record of forested lowlands inundated by volcanic mudflows, followed sequentially by rising water level associated first with deposition in swamp and lake-margin environments and later by deposition in a lake environment. The lakebed sediments contain common siderite concretions of varied form, including coprolite-shaped concretions that are confined to lakebed deposits. The volcanic mudflow deposits are similar to deposits of mudflows-lahars of modern Cascades stratovolcanoes. Two volcanic ash fall beds contained within lignites in the middle of the...

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