Paleomagnetic and isotopic dating of thrust-belt deformation along the eastern edge of the Helena salient, northern Crazy Mountains Basin, Montana
Paleomagnetic and isotopic dating of thrust-belt deformation along the eastern edge of the Helena salient, northern Crazy Mountains Basin, Montana
Geological Society of America Bulletin (April 1988) 100 (4): 492-499
- absolute age
- basins
- Broadwater County Montana
- Cenozoic
- Crazy Mountains
- Cretaceous
- dates
- emplacement
- faults
- fold belts
- Gallatin County Montana
- geochronology
- igneous rocks
- intrusions
- intrusive rocks
- isothermal remanent magnetization
- Jefferson County Montana
- K/Ar
- Laramide Orogeny
- Madison County Montana
- magnetization
- Meagher County Montana
- Mesozoic
- Montana
- nepheline syenite
- North America
- orogeny
- Paleocene
- Paleogene
- paleomagnetism
- Park County Montana
- plutonic rocks
- remanent magnetization
- Rocky Mountains foreland
- sills
- Silver Bow County Montana
- structural geology
- syenites
- tectonics
- Tertiary
- thrust faults
- trachytes
- United States
- Upper Cretaceous
- volcanic rocks
- southwestern Montana
- Helena salient
Thrust-belt deformation along the eastern edge of the Disturbed Belt in the Helena salient of Montana has not been well dated owing to a lack of syn- or postorogenic strata. In situ paleomagnetic data from alkaline intrusions exposed in the easternmost folds of the salient in the northern Crazy Mountains Basin, previously described as pre-, syn-, or posttectonic with respect to deformation, are well grouped (Dec. = 343 degrees , Inc. = 61 degrees , alpha (sub 95) = 5.0 degrees , k = 46, n = 16 sites); a negative fold test is significant at minimally 95% confidence. Intrusion and magnetization acquisition thus postdate fold and thrust deformation. K-Ar age determinations of selected intrusions range from 52 to 48 Ma. Paleomagnetic and isotopic age data, combined with stratigraphic information, indicate that folding in the northern Crazy Mountains Basin is middle to late Paleocene in age. This age is in agreement with suggested dates for deformation in the northern Montana Disturbed Belt but is recognizably older than the youngest episodes of frontal deformation in the Utah-Idaho-Wyoming salient. Data from this study and existing structural and stratigraphic information demonstrate that deformation in the overthrust belt and foreland provinces of southwest Montana overlapped temporally and spatially, ranged from Late Cretaceous to earliest Eocene in age, and progressed from west to east through time.