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Filters: Tags: {"type":"USGS Scientific Topic Keyword"} (X) > Types: Map Service (X) > partyWithName: Natural Hazards (X) > Extensions: ArcGIS REST Service (X)

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A point layer of sites known to be useful analogs for planetary science, such as impact craters, dunes, volcanoes, and other processes observed on bodies across the solar system.
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This geodatabase contains all the geologic map information for the Geologic Map of the San Juan caldera cluster, southwestern Colorado and is part of U.S. Geological Survey Geologic Investigations Map Series I-2799. The San Juan Mountains are the largest erosional remnant of a composite volcanic field that covered much of the southern Rocky Mountains in middle Tertiary time. The San Juan field consists mainly of intermediate-composition lavas and breccias, erupted about 35-30 Ma from scattered central volcanoes (Conejos Formation) and overlain by voluminous ash-flow sheets erupted from caldera sources. In the central San Juan Mountains, eruption of at least 8,800 km3 of dacitic-rhyolitic magma as nine major ash...


    map background search result map search result map Known Terrestrial Analog Sites for Planetary Science Database for the geologic map of the central San Juan caldera cluster, southwestern Colorado Known Terrestrial Analog Sites for Planetary Science