Tomichi Dome

Tomichi Dome[5] rises north of U.S. Highway 50 west of Hot Springs Creek and south of Waunita Hot Springs Reservoir in the southeast quarter of Gunnison County, Colorado. It is situated within the Gunnison National Forest.

Tomichi Dome
Tomichi Dome viewed from U.S. Route 50
Highest point
Elevation11,471 ft (3,496 m)[1][2]
Prominence2,325 ft (709 m)[2]
Isolation10.74 mi (17.28 km)[2]
ListingColorado prominent summits
Coordinates38°29′06″N 106°31′44″W / 38.4849944°N 106.5289192°W / 38.4849944; -106.5289192[3]
Geography
Tomichi Dome is located in Colorado
Tomichi Dome
Tomichi Dome
LocationGunnison County, Colorado, U.S.[3]
Parent rangeSawatch Range[2]
Topo mapUSGS 7.5' topographic map
Doyleville, Colorado[3]

Geology

Tomichi Dome is a prominent igneous mountain formed during the Tertiary. The predominant rock is rhyolite, but microgranite, breccia, and tuff have been cited as present. Surrounding the mountain, on the valley floor, is Mancos Shale, a Mesozoic sedimentary rock.[6][7][8]

Tomchi Dome has been described as an intrusion and also as an extrusive, volcanic feature. As an intrusion, the pluton may have formed when magma was intruded into the Mancos Shale resulting in a laccolith. Given the fine-grained texture of the rock, the laccolith is assumed to have been at a shallow depth and cooled rapidly. Venting may have been associated with the intrusion resulting in the rhyolytic breccia and tuff documented in the vicinity. Shallow rhyolitic plutons southwest of Tomichi Dome, in the San Juan Mountains near Lake City, have also been described as laccoliths.[8][9][10]

Alternatively, Tomichi Dome has been described as an extrusive, volcanic feature where the initial eruptions deposited breccia and tuff that is over 670 feet (200 m) thick. A flow or dome of topaz rhyolite overlies the tuff.[8][11][12]

Whether plutonic or volcanic, Tomichi Dome is possibly one of a string of igneous structures associated with the Rio Grande Rift, which stretches from Mexico to Colorado.[8][11]

Historical names

  • Tomichi Dome – 1907 [3]
  • Tumitche Dome

See also

Notes

  • Maps:
    • Gunnison Basin Public Lands. Forest Service Series Map. United States Department of Agriculture. Colorado, 2008.


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