KITCHI  FORMATION

 

The Kitchi Formation is a very thick, metamorphosed, heterolithic volcanic unit of Neoarchean age in the Negaunee-Ispheming area of Michigan's UP.  It consists of a succession of basalt lava flows, volcanic breccias, and volcanic tuffs (all metamorphosed).  The photos below show a spectacular volcanic metabreccia outcrop on the southern shores of Deer Lake, northwest of Ishpeming (see map).

 

The outcrop is a glacially smoothed & striated low knob.  The rocks are part of the middle Kitchi Formation and consist of volcanic metabreccias of andesitic to dacitic composition.  Despite metamorphism, the original clasts are very well defined in terms of shape, color, and composition.  The unit has been inferred to represent a subaqueous volcanic debris flow.

 

Volcanic metabreccia in the mid-Kitchi Formation (Neoarchean) - Deer Lake South outcrop.

 

Volcanic metabreccia in the mid-Kitchi Formation (Neoarchean) - Deer Lake South outcrop.

 

Volcanic metabreccia in the mid-Kitchi Formation (Neoarchean) - Deer Lake South outcrop.

 

Volcanic metabreccia in the mid-Kitchi Formation (Neoarchean) - Deer Lake South outcrop.

 

Volcanic metabreccia in the mid-Kitchi Formation (Neoarchean) - Deer Lake South outcrop.

 


 

Some info. from:

 

Bornhorst & Johnson (1993).  Geology of volcanic rocks in the south half of the Ishpeming Greenstone Belt, Michigan.  USGS Bulletin 1904-P.  13 pp.

 


 

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