The Independence Dike Swarm is a major Late Jurassic dike swarm extending over 373 miles (600 km) from the eastern Transverse Ranges northward to the east-central Sierra Nevada in southeastern California, United States.
The swarm consists of hundreds of dikes, filled with mafic to felsic rocks and are individually about 10 feet (3 m) in width. These dikes may be the roots of linear-fissure-array supervolcanoes.
References
- https://pubs.er.usgs.gov/publication/70207914
- Geological Society of America Field Guidebook Archived 2008-10-05 at the Wayback Machine
36°48′N 118°18′W / 36.8°N 118.3°W / 36.8; -118.3
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- Dike swarms
- Igneous petrology of California
- Geography of Inyo County, California
- Geography of Kern County, California
- Transverse Ranges
- Sierra Nevada (United States)
- Geology of Kern County, California
- Geology of Inyo County, California
- Kern County, California, geography stubs
- Inyo County, California, geography stubs
- United States geology stubs