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===North America=== *[[Bald Rock Dome|Bald Rock Batholith]] *[[Enchanted Rock]], Texas *[[Boulder Batholith]] *[[The Baths|British Virgin Islands]], Virgin Gorda *[[Chambers-Strathy Batholith]] *[[Chilliwack batholith]] *Golden Horn Batholith *[[Idaho Batholith]] *Ilimaussaq Batholith, [[Greenland]] *[[Kenosha Pass|Kenosha Batholith]] *[[Stuart Range | Mount Stuart Batholith]], [[Washington (state)|Washington]]<ref>{{cite web | url = https://www.dnr.wa.gov/publications/ger_ofr76-6_mount_stuart_batholith_190k.pdf | quote = "The Mount Stuart batholith is a Late Cretaceous calc-alkaline pluton composed of intrusive phases ranging in composition from two-pyroxene gabbro to granite." | title = Petrogenesis of the Mount Stuart Batholith Plutonic Equivalent of the High-Aluina Basalt Association|author = Erik H. Erikson Jr.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url = https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/0012821X81901382 | quote = The Mt. Stuart Batholith is a composite pluton of Late Cretaceous age that intrudes the crystalline North Cascades terrane of northwestern Washington. | author1 = Myrl E. BeckJr. | author2 = Russell F. Burmester | author3 = Ruth Schoonover | title = Paleomagnetism and tectonics of the Cretaceous Mt. Stuart Batholith of Washington: translation or tilt?}}</ref> *[[Wallowa Mountains|Wallowa Batholith]], [[Oregon]] *[[Peninsular Ranges]], [[Baja California (region)|Baja]] and [[Southern California]]<ref>{{cite book| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=BFWXBAAAQBAJ&q=%22Peninsular+Batholith%22| title = Douglas M. Morton, Fred K. Miller, Peninsular Ranges Batholith, Baja and Southern California, Geological Society of America, 2014| isbn = 9780813712116| last1 = Morton| first1 = Douglas M.| last2 = Miller| first2 = Fred K.| year = 2014}}</ref> *[[Pikes Peak granite|Pike's Peak Granite Batholith]] *[[Ruby Mountains]] *Rio Verde Batholith, Mexico *[[San Lorenzo Batholith]], [[Puerto Rico]] *[[Sierra Nevada Batholith]] *[[South Mountain (Nova Scotia)|South Mountain Batholith, Nova Scotia]] *[[Enchanted Rock|Town Mountain Granite]] batholith, Texas *[[Wyoming batholith]]<ref name="AMMIN2016">{{cite journal|author1=Davin A. Bagdonas |author2=Carol D. Frost |author3=C. Mark Fanning |title=The origin of extensive Neoarchean high-silica batholiths and the nature of intrusive complements to silicic ignimbrites: Insights from the Wyoming batholith, U.S.A.|journal=American Mineralogist|date=2016|volume=101|issue=6 |pages=1332β1347|doi=10.2138/am-2016-5512 |bibcode=2016AmMin.101.1332B |s2cid=131845599 |url=http://www.minsocam.org/msa/ammin/toc/2016/Abstracts/AM101P1332.pdf|access-date=June 8, 2016|quote=...Neoarchean granite batholith, herein named the Wyoming batholith, extends more than 200 km across central Wyoming in the Granite and the Laramie Mountains.}}</ref>
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