LOS VIDRIOS (LOMAS DEL NORTE)

NORTHERN SONORA

pinacate2.GIF (111336 bytes)

 

 

 

The mafic Sierra Pinacate Volcanic Field with the rhyolite structures of Los Vidrios to the east with the Rio Sonoyta flowing to the south. The Tertiary rhyolite is substantially older than the Quaternary mafic eruptive events in the Sierra Pinacate. Landsat photo.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Losvidr.JPG (43820 bytes)

Coalesced rhyolite domes at Los Vidrios, east of the Sierra Pinacate Volcanic Field, northern Sonora. Rio Sonoyta wash in foreground

Located between UTM 352 and 354 East and 29 and 30 North of the Puerto Peñasco H12-1 Mexican Topographic Quad 1:250,000 northwest Sonora, Mexico. This is a probable middle Tertiary glass source located about 8 to 12 km south of the US/Mexican border along the Rio Sonoyta and on the eastern border of the predominately mafic Quaternary Sierra Pinacate Volcanic Field. The source is comprised of a northwest-southeast arcing series of rhyolite and rhyolite/obsidian domes. Nodules up to 7 cm in diameter are found in a rhyolite/tuff/obsidian conglomerate eroding into Rio Sonoita and embedded in perlite within the rhyolite domes. Rhyolite/obsidian units, some up to 30 m by 40 m, are common on many domes. One small dome between UTM 29-30 North and 352-353 East (on the 353 line), consists of an alternating series of rhyolite and obsidian strata with nodules embedded within the glass, similar to Slate Mountain. Densities within the devitrified glass matrix are up to 50 per m2, perhaps five times that if pea size nodules are counted. Within the conglomerate densities reach 10 to 20 per 5 m2. This dome complex has been named Lomas del Norte and considered and early eruptive event as part of the Sierra Pinacate volcanic field (Vidal-Solano 2008).  The elemental composition acquired by Vidal-Solano and his team matches the XRF analysis by this lab (2008:695; and from this lab.  The plateau date by 40Ar/39Ar for obsidian from Los Vidrios is 14.23±0.15 Ma and statistically contemporaneous with Los Sitios del Agua even though the elemental composition is very different (see below; Vidal-Solano 2008:697).

Secondary deposition consists of erosion through the Rio Sonoita river system south at least as far as the Sierra Blanca and perhaps 65 km to the Gulf of California. The thin cortex on the nodules varies from brown to gray and velvet-like in the conglomerate above the Rio Sonoita. The aphyric glass is very consistently black and very opaque even in the thinnest flakes. No banding or lighter shades were noticed in hundreds of nodules collected.

The knapping quality of this obsidian is good, but the glass is quite brittle and bipolar reduction sometimes resulted in 'exploding' nodules. Pressure flaking, however was quite successful when a flake was successfully removed and flakes were easily removed with minimum platform collapse. There are no known geological or archaeological references to this source other than a short mention in Lumholtz (1912:286).

In October 2008 while on the way to the Los Sitios del Agua obsidian source along the Rio Sonoyta (former AZ Unknown A), I visited the bajada below the above collection locality and collected about 50 samples.  The analysis of a sample of these are included below with the date prefix 102508. The 1986 samples were analyzed on the old Spectrace 440 instrument.  The analysis here on the new ThermoScientific Quant'X indicates that the elemental concentrations are essentially the same, and there is little inter-instrument variability (see tables below).

Mean and central tendency for 26 samples collected in 1986 and 2008

 

Raw elemental concentrations for Los Vidrios source standards and USGS RGM-1 rhyolite standard. All measurements in parts per million (ppm).

Sample Ti Mn Fe Zn1 Rb Sr Y Zr Nb Ba Pb Th
1986-1 725 216 13174   262 13 73 238 32      
1986-2 709 198 11970   238 13 68 217 35      
1986-3 833 203 13277   266 14 76 239 35      
1986-4 893 232 13804   271 15 77 240 31      
1986-5 837 223 13521   271 14 79 241 32      
1986-6 798 198 13402   270 15 80 236 31      
1986-A1 836 208 13104   258 13 73 236 29      
1986-A2-1 675 179 11743   236 12 68 223 30      
1986-A2-2 951 236 11495 84 228 13 62 212 28 32 24 23
1986-A2-3 905 252 10980 74 220 19 64 207 26 19 27 27
1986-A2-4 992 282 12611 90 242 17 70 225 33 5 28 25
1986-A3 879 224 13666   266 16 76 242 34      
1986-A3 658 201 13195   264 13 75 241 35      
102508-1-10 808 221 10194 75 207 16 63 197 26 40 16 19
102508-1-11 784 230 10456 83 231 12 66 216 30 32 28 25
102508-1-12 816 251 10974 85 235 11 65 221 25 32 27 29
102508-1-13 743 244 10274 77 226 10 69 215 31 41 27 28
102508-1-14 728 246 10157 79 227 13 64 214 30 42 26 27
102508-1-15 765 244 11118 86 239 12 68 218 30 35 26 34
102508-1-16 848 265 12009 94 253 12 68 223 29 24 32 34
102508-1-17 795 231 10567 80 232 15 66 221 31 34 28 32
102508-1-18 815 252 11845 93 248 13 72 229 32 39 29 33
102508-1-19 760 253 11395 88 244 13 61 222 35 41 28 27
102508-1-20 830 265 12077 92 254 12 73 231 31 41 31 28
-21 918 265 12937 95 255 16 71 231 34 46 29 42
-23 877 243 11671 87 232 14 66 212 30 12 26 36
RGM1-S4 1569 284 13146 46 145 108 25 216 14 828 26 20

1 The 1986 analyses on the Spectrace 440 EDXRF did not acquire Zn or Ba. Three of the 1986 collected samples were analyzed in 2018.

 

Major oxides for one Los Vidrios source standard collected in October 2008 and analysis of RGM-1 

Sample

SiO2

Al2O3

CaO

Fe2O3

K2O

MgO

MnO

Na2O

TiO2

Los Vidrios

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

102508-1-16

74.542

12.304

1.474

2.214

5.215

0.047

0.054

3.68

0.255

RGM1-S4

75.680

12.477

1.3024

1.806

4.550

<.001

0.0379

3.77

0.196

References

Lumholtz, C. 1912, New Trails in Mexico: An Account of One Year's Exploration in North-Western Sonora, Mexico, and South-Western Arizona.  Glorieta, New Mexico: Rio Grande Press.

Shackley, M.S. 2005, Obsidian: Geology and Archaeology in the North American Southwest. Tucson, University of Arizona Press.

 

This page maintained by Steve Shackley ([email protected]).
Copyright © 2018 M. Steven Shackley. All rights reserved.
Revised: 22 August 2024

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