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Journal
Publisher
Section
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Africa
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North Africa
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Libya (1)
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-
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Asia
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Far East
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China
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Kunlun Mountains (1)
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Qaidam Basin (1)
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Qilian Mountains (1)
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Xianshuihe fault zone (1)
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Japan (1)
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Himalayas (2)
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Indian Peninsula
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India (1)
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Siberia (4)
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Siberian Platform (2)
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Tibetan Plateau (1)
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Yakutia Russian Federation
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Verkhoyansk Range (1)
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Atlantic Ocean
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Mid-Atlantic Ridge (1)
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Australasia
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Australia
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Victoria Australia
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New Zealand
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Canada
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Eastern Canada
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Maritime Provinces
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Western Canada
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Alberta
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Medicine Hat Alberta (1)
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British Columbia
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Kimberley British Columbia (2)
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Skeena Mountains (1)
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Canadian Cordillera (3)
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Canadian Rocky Mountains (2)
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Central America
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Costa Rica (1)
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Commonwealth of Independent States
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Russian Federation
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Siberian Platform (2)
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Yakutia Russian Federation
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Verkhoyansk Range (1)
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Crazy Mountains (1)
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Europe
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Alps (1)
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Western Europe
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Scandinavia
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Norway (1)
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Western Gneiss region (1)
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Grand Canyon (1)
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Lewis thrust fault (3)
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North America
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Appalachians
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Blue Ridge Province (3)
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Central Appalachians (1)
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Piedmont (3)
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Southern Appalachians (2)
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Basin and Range Province
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Great Basin (1)
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Belt Basin (11)
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Canadian Shield
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Churchill Province
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Hearne Province (1)
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Glacier National Park (2)
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Kootenay Arc (1)
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North American Cordillera
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Canadian Cordillera (3)
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Omineca Belt (1)
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Purcell Mountains (5)
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Rocky Mountains
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Canadian Rocky Mountains (2)
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U. S. Rocky Mountains
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Bitterroot Range
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Beaverhead Mountains (4)
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Tendoy Range (1)
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Rocky Mountains foreland (2)
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North Island (1)
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Pacific Ocean
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East Pacific
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Northeast Pacific
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Middle America Trench (1)
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North Pacific
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Northeast Pacific
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Middle America Trench (1)
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Northwest Pacific
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Nankai Trough (1)
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West Pacific
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Northwest Pacific
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Nankai Trough (1)
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Pioneer Mountains (1)
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Ruby Range (1)
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Saltville Fault (1)
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Snake River canyon (1)
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South America
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Chile (1)
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Sullivan Mine (1)
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United States
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Absaroka Fault (1)
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Alabama (3)
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Alaska (1)
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Arizona
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Coconino County Arizona (1)
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Carolina Terrane (1)
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Coeur d'Alene mining district (1)
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Colorado (1)
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Colorado Plateau (1)
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Georgia
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Bartow County Georgia
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Cartersville Georgia (1)
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Great Basin (1)
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Idaho
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Lemhi County Idaho
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Blackbird mining district (1)
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Lemhi Range (3)
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Snake River plain (2)
-
-
Lewis and Clark Lineament (4)
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Mojave Desert (1)
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Montana
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Beaverhead County Montana
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Tendoy Range (1)
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Boulder Batholith (1)
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Gallatin County Montana (1)
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Madison County Montana (1)
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Mineral County Montana (1)
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Missoula County Montana (1)
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Sanders County Montana (1)
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New Jersey (1)
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Pine Mountain Window (1)
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Sevier orogenic belt (2)
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South Carolina (2)
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U. S. Rocky Mountains
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Bitterroot Range
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Beaverhead Mountains (4)
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Tendoy Range (1)
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Virginia (1)
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Wyoming (3)
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Wyoming Province (3)
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Yavapai Province (1)
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commodities
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mineral deposits, genesis (2)
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elements, isotopes
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isotopes
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Hf-177/Hf-176 (1)
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Nd-144/Nd-143 (1)
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Pb-207/Pb-206 (1)
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Sr-87/Sr-86 (1)
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metals
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strontium
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Sr-87/Sr-86 (1)
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bismuth (1)
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gold (1)
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hafnium
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Hf-177/Hf-176 (1)
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lead
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Pb-207/Pb-206 (1)
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rare earths
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neodymium
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Nd-144/Nd-143 (1)
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silicon (1)
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fossils
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Invertebrata (1)
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microfossils (1)
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palynomorphs
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acritarchs (1)
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Plantae
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algae (1)
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-
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geochronology methods
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Ar/Ar (4)
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fission-track dating (1)
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paleomagnetism (7)
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Pb/Pb (1)
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Rb/Sr (1)
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thermochronology (1)
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U/Pb (5)
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geologic age
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Cenozoic
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Tertiary
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Neogene
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Miocene
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lower Miocene
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Waitemata Group (1)
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-
-
-
Paleogene
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Eocene (5)
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Oligocene (3)
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Paleocene (1)
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Renova Formation (1)
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-
-
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Mesozoic
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Cretaceous
-
Blairmore Group (1)
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Lower Cretaceous (2)
-
Upper Cretaceous
-
Belly River Formation (1)
-
Frontier Formation (1)
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Two Medicine Formation (1)
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-
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Jurassic
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Upper Jurassic
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Stump Formation (1)
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-
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Nugget Sandstone (1)
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Triassic
-
Lower Triassic
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Dinwoody Formation (1)
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-
-
-
Paleozoic
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Cambrian
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Acadian (1)
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Conasauga Group (2)
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Lower Cambrian
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Rome Formation (2)
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-
-
Carboniferous
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Mississippian
-
Lower Mississippian
-
Pocono Formation (1)
-
-
Madison Group (2)
-
Upper Mississippian
-
Parkwood Formation (1)
-
-
-
Pennsylvanian
-
Pottsville Group (1)
-
-
-
Catskill Formation (1)
-
Knox Group (1)
-
lower Paleozoic
-
Ashe Formation (1)
-
-
Ordovician
-
Upper Ordovician
-
Bighorn Dolomite (1)
-
-
-
Permian
-
Phosphoria Formation (1)
-
-
Silurian (2)
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-
Phanerozoic (3)
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Precambrian
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Archean
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Neoarchean (1)
-
-
Prichard Formation (2)
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Purcell System (6)
-
upper Precambrian
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Proterozoic
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Mesoproterozoic
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Belt Supergroup (14)
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Missoula Group (3)
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Revett Quartzite (1)
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Roper Group (1)
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Neoproterozoic (6)
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-
-
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igneous rocks
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igneous rocks
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granophyre (1)
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plutonic rocks
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diabase (1)
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granites
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charnockite (1)
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granodiorites (1)
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volcanic rocks
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basalts (1)
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ophiolite (1)
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metamorphic rocks
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metamorphic rocks
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cataclasites (1)
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eclogite (1)
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gneisses
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augen gneiss (1)
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marbles (1)
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metaigneous rocks
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metadiabase (1)
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serpentinite (1)
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metasedimentary rocks (3)
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metasomatic rocks
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serpentinite (1)
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mylonites (1)
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quartzites (2)
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schists (1)
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ophiolite (1)
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turbidite (1)
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minerals
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arsenides
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arsenopyrite (1)
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cobaltite (1)
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carbonates
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calcite (1)
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dolomite (1)
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oxides
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iron oxides (1)
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magnetite (1)
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phosphates
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monazite (1)
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xenotime (1)
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silicates
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chain silicates
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amphibole group
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clinoamphibole
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hornblende (1)
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-
-
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framework silicates
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feldspar group
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plagioclase (1)
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-
-
orthosilicates
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nesosilicates
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zircon group
-
zircon (4)
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-
-
sorosilicates
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epidote group
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allanite (1)
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epidote (1)
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-
-
-
sheet silicates
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illite (1)
-
mica group
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biotite (1)
-
-
-
-
sulfides
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arsenopyrite (1)
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chalcopyrite (1)
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cobaltite (1)
-
pyrite (1)
-
-
-
Primary terms
-
absolute age (9)
-
Africa
-
North Africa
-
Libya (1)
-
-
-
Asia
-
Far East
-
China
-
Kunlun Mountains (1)
-
Qaidam Basin (1)
-
Qilian Mountains (1)
-
Xianshuihe fault zone (1)
-
-
Japan (1)
-
-
Himalayas (2)
-
Indian Peninsula
-
India (1)
-
-
Siberia (4)
-
Siberian Platform (2)
-
Tibetan Plateau (1)
-
Yakutia Russian Federation
-
Verkhoyansk Range (1)
-
-
-
Atlantic Ocean
-
Mid-Atlantic Ridge (1)
-
-
Australasia
-
Australia
-
Lachlan fold belt (1)
-
Victoria Australia
-
Melbourne Australia (1)
-
-
-
New Zealand
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Northland New Zealand (1)
-
-
-
bibliography (1)
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biography (1)
-
Canada
-
Eastern Canada
-
Maritime Provinces
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New Brunswick (1)
-
-
-
Stikinia Terrane (1)
-
Western Canada
-
Alberta
-
Medicine Hat Alberta (1)
-
-
British Columbia
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Bowser Basin (1)
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Kimberley British Columbia (2)
-
Skeena Mountains (1)
-
Sustut Basin (1)
-
-
Canadian Cordillera (3)
-
Canadian Rocky Mountains (2)
-
-
-
Cenozoic
-
Tertiary
-
Neogene
-
Miocene
-
lower Miocene
-
Waitemata Group (1)
-
-
-
-
Paleogene
-
Eocene (5)
-
Oligocene (3)
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Paleocene (1)
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Renova Formation (1)
-
-
-
-
Central America
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Costa Rica (1)
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-
continental drift (8)
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crust (11)
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deformation (13)
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diagenesis (1)
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Earth (1)
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Europe
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Alps (1)
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Western Europe
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Scandinavia
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Norway (1)
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Western Gneiss region (1)
-
-
-
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faults (24)
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folds (8)
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foliation (4)
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fractures (2)
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geochemistry (3)
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geochronology (1)
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geodesy (1)
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geophysical methods (6)
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geosynclines (2)
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heat flow (2)
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igneous rocks
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granophyre (1)
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plutonic rocks
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diabase (1)
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granites
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charnockite (1)
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granodiorites (1)
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-
volcanic rocks
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basalts (1)
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-
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intrusions (3)
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Invertebrata (1)
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isostasy (1)
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isotopes
-
stable isotopes
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Hf-177/Hf-176 (1)
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Nd-144/Nd-143 (1)
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Pb-207/Pb-206 (1)
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Sr-87/Sr-86 (1)
-
-
-
magmas (3)
-
mantle (4)
-
Mesozoic
-
Cretaceous
-
Blairmore Group (1)
-
Lower Cretaceous (2)
-
Upper Cretaceous
-
Belly River Formation (1)
-
Frontier Formation (1)
-
Two Medicine Formation (1)
-
-
-
Jurassic
-
Upper Jurassic
-
Stump Formation (1)
-
-
-
Nugget Sandstone (1)
-
Triassic
-
Lower Triassic
-
Dinwoody Formation (1)
-
-
-
-
metal ores
-
cobalt ores (1)
-
copper ores (1)
-
gold ores (1)
-
-
metals
-
alkaline earth metals
-
strontium
-
Sr-87/Sr-86 (1)
-
-
-
bismuth (1)
-
gold (1)
-
hafnium
-
Hf-177/Hf-176 (1)
-
-
lead
-
Pb-207/Pb-206 (1)
-
-
rare earths
-
neodymium
-
Nd-144/Nd-143 (1)
-
-
-
-
metamorphic rocks
-
cataclasites (1)
-
eclogite (1)
-
gneisses
-
augen gneiss (1)
-
-
marbles (1)
-
metaigneous rocks
-
metadiabase (1)
-
serpentinite (1)
-
-
metasedimentary rocks (3)
-
metasomatic rocks
-
serpentinite (1)
-
-
mylonites (1)
-
quartzites (2)
-
schists (1)
-
-
metamorphism (3)
-
mineral deposits, genesis (2)
-
Mohorovicic discontinuity (1)
-
North America
-
Appalachians
-
Blue Ridge Province (3)
-
Central Appalachians (1)
-
Piedmont (3)
-
Southern Appalachians (2)
-
-
Basin and Range Province
-
Great Basin (1)
-
-
Belt Basin (11)
-
Canadian Shield
-
Churchill Province
-
Hearne Province (1)
-
-
-
Glacier National Park (2)
-
Kootenay Arc (1)
-
North American Cordillera
-
Canadian Cordillera (3)
-
-
Omineca Belt (1)
-
Purcell Mountains (5)
-
Rocky Mountains
-
Canadian Rocky Mountains (2)
-
U. S. Rocky Mountains
-
Bitterroot Range
-
Beaverhead Mountains (4)
-
-
Tendoy Range (1)
-
-
-
Rocky Mountains foreland (2)
-
-
ocean floors (1)
-
orogeny (7)
-
Pacific Ocean
-
East Pacific
-
Northeast Pacific
-
Middle America Trench (1)
-
-
-
North Pacific
-
Northeast Pacific
-
Middle America Trench (1)
-
-
Northwest Pacific
-
Nankai Trough (1)
-
-
-
West Pacific
-
Northwest Pacific
-
Nankai Trough (1)
-
-
-
-
paleogeography (9)
-
paleomagnetism (7)
-
Paleozoic
-
Cambrian
-
Acadian (1)
-
Conasauga Group (2)
-
Lower Cambrian
-
Rome Formation (2)
-
-
-
Carboniferous
-
Mississippian
-
Lower Mississippian
-
Pocono Formation (1)
-
-
Madison Group (2)
-
Upper Mississippian
-
Parkwood Formation (1)
-
-
-
Pennsylvanian
-
Pottsville Group (1)
-
-
-
Catskill Formation (1)
-
Knox Group (1)
-
lower Paleozoic
-
Ashe Formation (1)
-
-
Ordovician
-
Upper Ordovician
-
Bighorn Dolomite (1)
-
-
-
Permian
-
Phosphoria Formation (1)
-
-
Silurian (2)
-
-
palynomorphs
-
acritarchs (1)
-
-
petroleum (1)
-
petrology (3)
-
Phanerozoic (3)
-
Plantae
-
algae (1)
-
-
plate tectonics (18)
-
Precambrian
-
Archean
-
Neoarchean (1)
-
-
Prichard Formation (2)
-
Purcell System (6)
-
upper Precambrian
-
Proterozoic
-
Mesoproterozoic
-
Belt Supergroup (14)
-
Missoula Group (3)
-
Revett Quartzite (1)
-
Roper Group (1)
-
-
Neoproterozoic (6)
-
-
-
-
remote sensing (1)
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reservoirs (1)
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sea-floor spreading (2)
-
sedimentary rocks
-
clastic rocks
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argillite (1)
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claystone (2)
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diamictite (2)
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mudstone (1)
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sandstone (1)
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shale (1)
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siltstone (1)
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-
-
sedimentary structures
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biogenic structures
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microbial mats (1)
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planar bedding structures
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bedding (3)
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cross-bedding (1)
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soft sediment deformation (1)
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sedimentation (5)
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sediments
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clastic sediments
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clay (1)
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mud (1)
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sand (2)
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marine sediments (2)
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silicon (1)
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South America
-
Chile (1)
-
-
stratigraphy (4)
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structural analysis (9)
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structural geology (4)
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tectonics
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neotectonics (1)
-
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United States
-
Absaroka Fault (1)
-
Alabama (3)
-
Alaska (1)
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Arizona
-
Coconino County Arizona (1)
-
-
Carolina Terrane (1)
-
Coeur d'Alene mining district (1)
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Colorado (1)
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Colorado Plateau (1)
-
Georgia
-
Bartow County Georgia
-
Cartersville Georgia (1)
-
-
-
Great Basin (1)
-
Idaho
-
Lemhi County Idaho
-
Blackbird mining district (1)
-
-
Lemhi Range (3)
-
Snake River plain (2)
-
-
Lewis and Clark Lineament (4)
-
Mojave Desert (1)
-
Montana
-
Beaverhead County Montana
-
Tendoy Range (1)
-
-
Boulder Batholith (1)
-
Gallatin County Montana (1)
-
Madison County Montana (1)
-
Mineral County Montana (1)
-
Missoula County Montana (1)
-
Sanders County Montana (1)
-
-
New Jersey (1)
-
New Mexico (1)
-
Pine Mountain Window (1)
-
Sevier orogenic belt (2)
-
South Carolina (2)
-
Tennessee (1)
-
U. S. Rocky Mountains
-
Bitterroot Range
-
Beaverhead Mountains (4)
-
-
Tendoy Range (1)
-
-
Virginia (1)
-
Wyoming (3)
-
Wyoming Province (3)
-
Yavapai Province (1)
-
-
volcanology (1)
-
-
sedimentary rocks
-
sedimentary rocks
-
clastic rocks
-
argillite (1)
-
claystone (2)
-
diamictite (2)
-
mudstone (1)
-
sandstone (1)
-
shale (1)
-
siltstone (1)
-
-
-
turbidite (1)
-
-
sedimentary structures
-
sedimentary structures
-
biogenic structures
-
microbial mats (1)
-
-
planar bedding structures
-
bedding (3)
-
cross-bedding (1)
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Mesoproterozoic Belt basin transect from Rogers Pass, Montana, to Sandpoint, Idaho, USA: Constraints for Proterozoic supercontinents and geomagnetism Available to Purchase
ABSTRACT This field trip will test global tectonic models against detailed geologic and paleomagnetic data from within the Belt basin, and will evaluate the significance of its Neoproterozoic to early Cambrian rift truncation. The trip will focus on the stratigraphy and paleotectonic evolution of the Mesoproterozoic Belt basin on an E-W transect from the shallow-water facies of the east margin of the basin at Rogers Pass through its deep-water interior near Sandpoint, Idaho, USA. With some variations, this trip will follow Don Winston’s classic trans-basin field guide from the east edge of the basin at Rogers Pass, Montana, to its western rift-truncation near Sandpoint, along Montana Highway 200 and Interstate 90 along the Lewis and Clark Line.
Mid-Proterozoic geomagnetic field was more consistent with a dipole than a quadrupole: COMMENT Open Access
Challenging the dipolar paradigm for Proterozoic Earth Available to Purchase
ABSTRACT A robust, geology-based Proterozoic continental assembly places the northern and eastern margins of the Siberian craton against the southwestern margins of Laurentia in a tight, spoon-in-spoon conjugate fit. The proposed assembly began to break apart in late Neoproterozoic and early Paleozoic time. Siberia then drifted clockwise along the Laurussian margin on coast-parallel transforms until suturing with Europe in late Permian time. The proposed drift path is permitted by a geocentric axial dipole (GAD) magnetic field from Silurian to Permian time. However, the Proterozoic reconstruction itself is not permitted by GAD. Rather, site-mean paleomagnetic data plotted on the reconstruction suggest a multipolar Proterozoic dynamo dominated by a quadrupole. The field may have resembled that of present-day Neptune, where, in the absence of a large solid inner core, a quadrupolar magnetic field may be generated within a thin spherical shell near the core-mantle boundary. The quadrupole may have dominated Earth’s geomagnetic field until early Paleozoic time, when the field became erratic and transitioned to a dipole, which overwhelmed the weaker quadrupole. The dipole then established a strong magnetosphere, effectively shielding Earth from ultraviolet-B (UV-B) radiation and making the planet habitable for Cambrian fauna.
Sheetflood sedimentology of the Mesoproterozoic Revett Formation, Belt Supergroup, northwestern Montana, USA Available to Purchase
The ca. 1.460 Ga Revett Formation is a gray and purple quartzite lithosome in northwestern Montana, and it interfingers eastward into red argillite of the Grinnell Formation in Glacier National Park. The Revett Formation was analyzed in northwestern Montana by identifying sedimentary structures in stratigraphic sections and by interpreting flow processes of the structures using the standard flow regime model (e.g., Simons et al., 1965). The sedimentary structures and thicknesses of the event beds were then organized into eight sediment types (lithofacies) that were grouped into three sediment complexes: the playa complex, the antidune complex, and the sheet sand complex. The arrangements of the sediment types and complexes within the stratigraphic framework of the lower informal Revett member indicated the configurations of the depositional environments in space, and the vertical configurations of the sediment types revealed the depositional history of the lower Revett member. The lower Revett member lithosome interfingers eastward into the red argillite of the Grinnell Formation lithosome, and has eight through-going descriptive, stacked, lithic units, called lithostromes. Lithostromes 2, 4, 6, and 8 (from the bottom up) are composed of the sheet sand complex and extend into playa complexes of the Grinnell Formation. They were deposited by sandy sheetfloods that flowed at grade and terminated as the water sank into the sand substrate. Between lithostromes 2, 4, 6, and 8 are lithostromes marked by playa lakes of the playa complex that spread from the east across western Montana during humid periods. They were overlain by sheetfloods of the antidune complex that built eastward over the playa complex as the playa lakes retreated with increasing aridity. The antidune complex was overlain by the sheet sand complex of a vast sand plain deposited by sheetfloods from the southwest that flowed at grade level across western Montana during arid periods. The sheetflood deposits of the Revett Formation were mostly deposited by the upper-flow regime element of the established fluvial facies model.
Crinkle cracks in the Proterozoic Piegan Group, Belt Supergroup, Montana and Idaho: A descriptive style of sand-filled cracks hypothetically formed by subaqueous solitary-like waves Available to Purchase
Crinkle cracks are sand-filled cracks up to 5 mm wide in plan view that pinch at their ends. In cross section, they are canted and crinkled. They cut mudstone beds that underlie hummocky cross-laminated sandstone lenses. They are here described from the Piegan Group, Proterozoic Belt Supergroup, but they are widespread in Proterozoic and Phanerozoic marine and lacustrine rocks. However, they represent a distinctive, descriptive style of mudcracks, not attributed to inferred syneresis processes, although they have been commonly attributed to syneresis. In plan view, crinkle cracks closely resemble cracks formed where oscillatory waves striking viscous mud banks are transformed into fluid solitary-like waves that open surface cracks on their trailing limbs and close the cracks on their leading limbs as they pass through the viscous mud. Crinkle cracks preserved in rocks are hypothetically attributed to oscillatory waves moving sand over viscous mud. The oscillatory waves are transformed into solitary-like waves as they pass down into the mud, forming the cracks. The surface sand falls down into the cracks, preserving them. With burial, the water escapes, and the viscous mud compacts, crinkling the sand-filled cracks.
A review of molar-tooth structures with some speculations on their origin Available to Purchase
Molar-tooth structures generally form a network of interconnected vertical and horizontal calcite ribbons and occasional spheroidal objects or “blobs” found in fine-grained, probably marine sediments spanning the late Archean to late Neoproterozoic interval, a duration of ~1900 m.y., or nearly half Earth's stratigraphic record. Vertical ribbons, averaging 5 mm in thickness, are generally intricately folded or fragmented by compaction. Decompaction shows that some ribbons may have been up to a meter in length perpendicular to bedding, forming in sediments that originally contained ~70% water, implying formation in sediment depths of ~1.7 m or less. Though at least 10 processes have been suggested for the blobs and ribbons, they were most likely voids created by the rise of gas bubbles from the decay of microbial mats that were rapidly filled with calcite. Horizontal ribbons probably formed under conditions of high pore-fluid pressure due to an overlying seal attributed to extracellular polymeric substances (EPSs) associated with the microbial mats. Cathodoluminescence imaging reveals that several molar-tooth fills show two distinct components: (1) earlier granular cores (now calcite) that are overgrown by (2) polygonal calcite. The earlier cores may have begun as an amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC) phase that recrystallized as calcite. Molar-tooth structures appear to simply reflect the formation of compacted calcite-filled voids under a seal of microbial mats and EPSs. Molar-tooth structures were present on Earth and may have played a significant role in the earlier history of other rocky extraterrestrial bodies with aqueous environments.
Paleoenvironmental implications of an expanded microfossil assemblage from the Chamberlain Formation, Belt Supergroup, Montana Available to Purchase
The Chamberlain Formation, one of the lower members of the early Mesoproterozoic Belt Supergroup, has previously yielded low-diversity assemblages of microfossils but the reported fossils were of limited utility for inferring paleoenvironmental conditions. Here, we describe substantially more diverse microfossil assemblages from drill core of the Chamberlain Formation obtained from the Black Butte mine locality near White Sulphur Springs, Montana. The Chamberlain Formation biota contains abundant Valeria , Leiosphaeridia , Synsphaeridium , and Lineaforma , with lesser amounts of Satka , Symplassosphaeridium , and Coniunctiophycus. The assemblages partially overlap with, but are distinct from, microfossils recently reported from the Greyson Formation, another unit from the Helena embayment of the Belt Supergroup. Since the overlapping taxa exhibit similar states of preservation but dissimilar relative abundances, we interpret the assemblages as reflective of distinct paleoenvironmental conditions of the sampled sections of the Chamberlain and Greyson Formations. The Chamberlain Formation assemblages are most comparable to microfossil groupings reported from the Bylot Supergroup of Canada and the Roper Group of Australia from sediments from very shallow-water (supratidal to lower shoreface) marine environments. This comparison corroborates previous hypotheses on the basis of sedimentological data that the lower Chamberlain Formation sediments were formed in a lagoonal or mud-flat environment. By contrast, the Greyson Formation assemblages are most comparable to microfossil groupings associated with sediments from shallow-shelf marine environments. The fidelity of comparisons among the 1.2 Ga Bylot Supergroup, 1.49 Ga Roper Group, and 1.45 Ga Belt Supergroup assemblages indicates that the groups of microorganisms that produced these assemblages, and their associations with the paleoenvironments that they inhabited, may have been characteristic of the littoral marine biosphere throughout much of the Mesoproterozoic.
Stratigraphy of the Lemhi subbasin of the Belt Supergroup Available to Purchase
New regional mapping documents that a thick quartzite sequence in the Lemhi subbasin of the Belt-Purcell basin lies near the top of the Mesoproterozoic stratigraphic column, and that two finer-grained units have been miscorrelated. This observation requires reassessment of the subbasin's stratigraphy, which we present here. Determination of the relationships between the stratigraphic units of the Lemhi Range and Salmon River and Beaverhead Mountains and better-known Belt Supergroup units to the north has been hampered by miscorrelation of this upper quartzite sequence with older strata, and by miscorrelation of the type Apple Creek Formation with a similar but stratigraphically lower unit. The base of the upper quartzite sequence includes the Swauger and Lawson Creek Formations, which are the highest units previously identified in the Lemhi subbasin. This sequence continues upward through quartzite units described here that underlie or comprise lateral equivalents of the type Apple Creek Formation in the Lemhi Range. The spatial distribution of these quartzite units extends the Lemhi subbasin farther east and north in Montana and northwest in Idaho. The complete stratigraphy reflects the stratigraphic separation of the two “Apple Creeks” and expands the type Apple Creek Formation to accommodate the quartzite units into the regional Mesoproterozoic stratigraphy. Our proposed correlation of the thick upper quartzite sequence with the Bonner Formation and higher units of the Missoula Group in the main part of the Belt basin requires that subsidence of the Lemhi subbasin was significantly faster than that of the main part of the Belt basin during deposition of the upper Missoula Group. Therefore, the two parts of the Belt basin were distinct tectonically, although they shared common sediment sources.
Giant folds and complex faults in Mesoproterozoic Lemhi strata of the Belt Supergroup, northern Beaverhead Mountains, Montana and Idaho Available to Purchase
A recent 1:24,000 scale mapping project within the northern Beaverhead Mountains along the Idaho-Montana border has resulted in a reinterpretation of both the Mesoproterozoic stratigraphy and the regional structural framework. A 15-km-thick stratigraphic section of the Mesoproterozoic Lemhi subbasin was initially deformed by northeast-southwest shortening into giant northwest-striking, northeast-verging folds, probably during Cretaceous Sevier orogenesis. These initial folds were then dissected by a system of subparallel and anastomosing, oblique-slip reverse, thrust, and normal faults that generally strike northwest, but that exhibit east-west–oriented lineations, suggesting components of strike-slip displacement. Contractional faulting appears to have been followed by Eocene to Miocene extensional faulting, with many normal faults following the preexisting fabrics. Extension opened Tertiary basins along some of these faults, including the Salmon Basin along the southwestern side of the Beaverhead Range. Subparallel faults in the surrounding region appear to have a similar complex history, and all appear to be part of a major northwest-striking Cretaceous fold-and-thrust belt that was later dissected by Tertiary extension. Although the faults of the Beaverhead Mountains are significant and long-lived, they are not terrane-bounding structures separating the Belt and Lemhi sedimentary sequences. Instead, Lemhi strata extend across the range and northward to Missoula, where they grade into correlative Missoula Group strata.
Detrital zircons in the Mesoproterozoic upper Belt Supergroup in the Pioneer, Beaverhead, and Lemhi Ranges, Montana and Idaho: The Big White arc Available to Purchase
We used laser ablation–inductively coupled plasma–mass spectrometry to determine the U-Pb ages for 1206 detrital zircons from 15 samples of the Lemhi subbasin, upper Belt Supergroup, in southwest Montana and east-central Idaho. We recognize two main detrital-zircon provenance groups. The first is found in the Swauger and overlying formations. It contains a unimodal 1740–1710 Ma zircon population that we infer was derived from the “Big White” arc, an accretionary magmatic arc to the south of the Belt Basin, with an estimated volume of 1.26 million km 3 —a huge feature on a global scale. The ɛ Hf(i) values for magmatic 1740–1710 Ma zircons from the Lawson Creek Formation are +8–0, suggesting that they were derived from more juvenile melts than most other Lemhi subbasin strata, which have values as evolved as −7 and may have been derived from an arc built on Proterozoic or Archean crust in the Mojave Province. Since paleocurrents in cross-bedded sandstones indicate northward flow, the proximate source terrane for this sand was to the south. The second provenance group is that of the Missoula Group (and Cambrian strata recycled from the Missoula Group), with significant numbers of 1780–1750 Ma grains and more than 15% Archean grains. This provenance group is thought to represent mixing of Yavapai Province, Mojave Province, and Archean Wyoming Province sources. Both of these provenance groups differ from the basal Belt Prichard Formation, and strata of the Trampas and Yankee Joe Basins of Arizona and New Mexico, which contain a major population of 1.61–1.50 Ga non–North American grains. The 12 youngest grains from the several Swauger Formation samples suggest the formation is younger than 1429 Ma. The three youngest grains from Apple Creek Formation diamictite suggest the rock is younger than 1390 Ma. This makes the Apple Creek diamictite the youngest part of Belt Supergroup strata south of the Canadian border. Though the Big White magmatic arc was produced before 1.7 Ga, the sediment may have been recycled several times before being deposited as locally feldspathic sandstone in the Lemhi subbasin depositional site 300 m.y. later. Because the detrital-zircon provenance does not change from Idaho east to Montana, our data do not support the existence of a major Great Divide megashear separating the Lemhi subbasin from the Belt Basin. In southwest Montana, unfossiliferous sandstones of Cambrian age contain the same detrital-zircon assemblages as the Swauger Formation and Missoula Group, suggesting reworking of a local Belt Supergroup source.
Geologic history of the Blackbird Co-Cu district in the Lemhi subbasin of the Belt-Purcell Basin Available to Purchase
The Blackbird cobalt-copper (Co-Cu) district in the Salmon River Mountains of east-central Idaho occupies the central part of the Idaho cobalt belt—a northwest-elongate, 55-km-long belt of Co-Cu occurrences, hosted in grayish siliciclastic metasedimentary strata of the Lemhi subbasin (of the Mesoproterozoic Belt-Purcell Basin). The Blackbird district contains at least eight stratabound ore zones and many discordant lodes, mostly in the upper part of the banded siltite unit of the Apple Creek Formation of Yellow Lake, which generally consists of interbedded siltite and argillite. In the Blackbird mine area, argillite beds in six stratigraphic intervals are altered to biotitite containing over 75 vol% of greenish hydrothermal biotite, which is preferentially mineralized. Past production and currently estimated resources of the Blackbird district total ~17 Mt of ore, averaging 0.74% Co, 1.4% Cu, and 1.0 ppm Au (not including downdip projections of ore zones that are open downward). A compilation of relative-age relationships and isotopic age determinations indicates that most cobalt mineralization occurred in Mesoproterozoic time, whereas most copper mineralization occurred in Cretaceous time. Mesoproterozoic cobaltite mineralization accompanied and followed dynamothermal metamorphism and bimodal plutonism during the Middle Mesoproterozoic East Kootenay orogeny (ca. 1379–1325 Ma), and also accompanied Grenvilleage (Late Mesoproterozoic) thermal metamorphism (ca. 1200–1000 Ma). Stratabound cobaltite-biotite ore zones typically contain cobaltite 1 in a matrix of biotitite ± tourmaline ± minor xenotime (ca. 1370–1320 Ma) ± minor chalcopyrite ± sparse allanite ± sparse microscopic native gold in cobaltite. Such cobaltite-biotite lodes are locally folded into tight F 2 folds with axial-planar S 2 cleavage and schistosity. Discordant replacement-style lodes of cobaltite 2 -biotite ore ± xenotime 2 (ca. 1320–1270 Ma) commonly follow S 2 fractures and fabrics. Discordant quartz-biotite and quartz-tourmaline breccias, and veins contain cobaltite 3 ± xenotime 3 (ca. 1058–990 Ma). Mesoproterozoic cobaltite deposition was followed by: (1) within-plate plutonism (530–485 Ma) and emplacement of mafic dikes (which cut cobaltite lodes but are cut by quartz-Fe-Cu-sulfide veins); (2) garnet-grade metamorphism (ca. 151–93 Ma); (3) Fe-Cu-sulfide mineralization (ca. 110–92 Ma); and (4) minor quartz ± Au-Ag ± Bi mineralization (ca. 92–83 Ma). Cretaceous Fe-Cu-sulfide vein, breccia, and replacement-style deposits contain various combinations of chalcopyrite ± pyrrhotite ± pyrite ± cobaltian arsenopyrite (not cobaltite) ± arsenopyrite ± quartz ± siderite ± monazite (ca. 144–88 Ma but mostly 110–92 Ma) ± xenotime (104–93 Ma). Highly radiogenic Pb (in these sulfides) and Sr (in siderite) indicate that these elements resided in Mesoproterozoic source rocks until they were mobilized after ca. 100 Ma. Fe-Cu-sulfide veins, breccias, and replacement deposits appear relatively undeformed and generally lack metamorphic fabrics. Composite Co-Cu-Au ore contains early cobaltite-biotite lodes, cut by Fe-Cu-sulfide veins and breccias, or overprinted by Fe-Cu-sulfide replacement-style deposits, and locally cut by quartz veinlets ± Au-Ag ± Bi minerals.
Iron mineralogy and redox conditions during deposition of the mid-Proterozoic Appekunny Formation, Belt Supergroup, Glacier National Park Available to Purchase
The redox state of the mid-Proterozoic oceans, lakes, and atmospheres is still debated, but it is vital for understanding the emergence and rise of macroscopic organisms and eukaryotes. The Appekunny Formation, Belt Supergroup, Montana, contains some of these early macrofossils dated between 1.47 Ga and 1.40 Ga and provides a well-preserved record of paleoenvironmental conditions. We analyzed the iron chemistry and mineralogy in samples from Glacier National Park, Montana, by pairing bulk rock magnetic techniques with textural techniques, including light microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and synchrotron-based X-ray absorption spectroscopy. Field observations of the Appekunny Formation combined with mineralogical information allowed revised correlations of stratigraphic members across the park. However, late diagenetic and/or metasomatic fluids affected primary iron phases, as evidenced by prevalent postdepositional phases including base-metal sulfides. On the west side of the park, pyrrhotite and chlorite rims formed during burial metamorphism in at least two recrystallization events. These complex postdepositional transformations could affect bulk proxies for paleoredox. By pairing bulk and textural techniques, we show primary records of redox chemistry were preserved in early diagenetic and often recrystallized framboidal pyrite, submicron magnetite grains interpreted to be detrital in origin, and red-bed laminae interpreted to record primary detrital oxides. Based on these observations, we hypothesize that the shallow waters of the mid-Proterozoic Belt Basin were similar to those in modern marine and lacustrine waters: fully oxygenated, with detrital reactive iron fluxes that mineralized pyrite during organic diagenesis in suboxic, anoxic, and sulfidic conditions in sedimentary pore waters.
Mafic magmatism in the Belt-Purcell Basin and Wyoming Province of western Laurentia Available to Purchase
Proterozoic mafic magmatic rocks exposed along the western side of North America, or western Laurentia, from Kimberley, British Columbia, through to northwestern Wyoming have been previously divided into two large igneous provinces: the ca. 1460 Ma Moyie-Purcell and the ca. 780 Ma Gunbarrel large igneous provinces. New geochemical analysis from this study demonstrates that there are additional intraplate mafic magmatic rocks present. Distinguishable by variable normalized rare earth element patterns combined with differing slopes on a binary Ti versus V plot, there are 17 identifiable geochemical signatures in the 307 whole-rock and trace-element analyses from this study. Only seven of these signatures can be linked to the ca. 1460 Ma Moyie-Purcell large igneous province, and one signature to the 780 Ma Gunbarrel large igneous province. This study has identified two groups of intrusions with distinct geochemical signatures previously linked with the ca. 1460 Ma Moyie-Purcell large igneous province but now recognized to be separate events, a single unique geochemical signature with a U-Pb age correlative with the Moyie-Purcell large igneous province and seven other heretofore unidentified signatures interpreted to belong to additional undated events.
U-Pb ages of zircons from the Lower Belt Supergroup and proximal crystalline basement: Implications for the early evolution of the Belt Basin Available to Purchase
The Neihart Quartzite and LaHood Formation are the lowermost units exposed in the Helena embayment, which forms the eastern and southeastern margins of the Belt Basin. Ages of detrital zircons from the Neihart Quartzite (quartz arenite) and a range of lithologies in the LaHood Formation (conglomerates to arkoses to siltstones) show that these units do not share a common provenance. The dominant provenance is Paleoarchean for the LaHood Formation and Paleoproterozoic for the Neihart Quartzite. Provenance is further constrained by the geochemistry and U-Pb ages of zircons from cobbles from the classic LaHood conglomerate in Jefferson Canyon (Tobacco Root Mountains), ages of Paleoproterozoic crystalline basement in the Beaverhead-Tendoy Mountains (1.8–2.45 Ga), and elemental and Sm-Nd isotopic data for select samples of both sedimentary rocks and crystalline basement within the basin. These data show a pronounced lack of detritus from abundant, proximal Neoarchean (2.7–2.9 Ga) and Paleoproterozoic (1.9–2.5 Ga) crystalline basement exposed in Laramide uplifts and the soles of Sevier-style thrust faults within and near the basin. Analyses of detrital mineral assemblages in the Lower Belt Supergroup units clearly indicate that the finer-grained portions of the LaHood Formation were not locally derived, based on abundant white mica in sections overlying tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) basement and lack of amphibole in units overlying hornblende tonalites. Significant fractionation also exists between sand- and cobble-size components in conglomerate of the LaHood Formation in terms of elemental abundances, isotopic compositions, and the U-Pb ages of zircons. Stratigraphically, the differences in the ages of the youngest zircons in all LaHood Formation samples and the Neihart Quartzite (1.71 Ga, Neihart; 1.78 Ga, LaHood) do not refute any proposed stratigraphic correlations. Nonetheless, age spectra of detrital zircons from the Neihart Quartzite, all LaHood lithologies, and previously published data for the Newland Formation show distinctions of provenance and an apparent lack of interaction among the sediment-supply systems of these three formations. This contrast suggests that distinct, likely fault-bounded, sedimentologically restricted subbasins characterized the initial stages of development of the eastern Belt Basin along the Perry line (southeastern margin of the Helena embayment), in the manner of a modern, but partially submerged, Basin and Range topography. The time of development of this topography is not clear, but it may have been related to the collapse phase of the Great Falls orogeny at ca. 1.7 Ga for the Helena embayment. The primary, north-south–trending Belt Basin also developed subsequent to the Great Falls orogeny along the western paleomargin of the newly amalgamated Wyoming–Medicine Hat–Hearne craton.
Highly conductive horizons in the Mesoproterozoic Belt-Purcell Basin: Sulfidic early basin strata as key markers of Cordilleran shortening and Eocene extension Available to Purchase
We investigated the crustal structure of the central Mesoproterozoic Belt Basin in northwestern Montana and northern Idaho using a crustal resistivity section derived from a transect of new short- and long-period magnetotelluric (MT) stations. Two- and three-dimensional resistivity models were generated from these data in combination with data collected previously along three parallel short-period MT profiles and from EarthScope MT stations. The models were interpreted together with coincident deep seismic-reflection data collected during the Consortium for Continental Reflection Profiling (COCORP) program. The upper-crustal portion of the resistivity model correlates well with the mapped surface geology and reveals a three-layer resistivity stratigraphy, best expressed beneath the axis of the Libby syncline. Prominent features in the resistivity models are thick conductive horizons that serve as markers in reconstructing the disrupted basin stratigraphy. The uppermost unit (up to 5 km thick), consisting of all of the Belt Supergroup above the Prichard Formation, is highly resistive (1000–10,000 Ω·m) and has relatively low seismic layer velocities. The intermediate unit (up to 7 km thick) consists of the exposed Prichard Formation and 3+ km of stratigraphy below the deepest stratigraphic exposures of the unit. The intermediate unit has low to moderate resistivity (30–200 Ω·m), relatively high seismic velocities, and high seismic reflectivity, with the latter two characteristics resulting from an abundance of thick syndepositional mafic sills. The lowest unit (5–10 km thick) is nowhere exposed but underlies the intermediate unit and has very high conductivity (4–8 Ω·m) and intermediate seismic velocities. This 17–22-km-thick three-layer stratigraphy is repeated below the Libby syncline, with a base at ~37 km depth. Seismic layer velocities indicate high mantle-like velocities below 37 km beneath the Libby syncline. The continuous high-conductivity layer in the lower repeated section is apparently displaced ~26 km to the east above a low-angle normal fault inferred to be the downdip continuation of the Eocene, east-dipping Purcell Trench detachment fault. Reversal of that and other Eocene displacements reveals a >50-km-thick crustal section at late Paleocene time. Further reversal of apparent thrust displacements of the three-layer stratigraphy along the Lewis, Pinkham, Libby, and Moyie thrusts allows construction of a restored cross section prior to the onset of Cordilleran thrusting in the Jurassic. A total of ~220 km of Jurassic–Paleocene shortening along these faults is indicated. The enhanced conductivity within the lowest (unexposed) Belt stratigraphic unit is primarily attributed to one or more horizons of laminated metallic sulfides; graphite, though not described within the Belt Supergroup, may also contribute to the enhanced conductivity of the lowest stratigraphic unit. A narrow conductive horizon observed within the Prichard Formation in the eastern part of the transect correlates with the stratigraphic position of the world-class Sullivan sedimentary exhalative massive sulfide deposit in southern British Columbia, and it may represent a distal sulfide blanket deposit broadly dispersed across the Belt Basin. By analogy, the thick conductive sub–Prichard Formation unit may represent repeated sulfide depositional events within the early rift history of the basin, potentially driven by hydrothermal fluids released during basaltic underplating of attenuated continental crust.
Unkinking the Lewis and Clark tectonic zone, Belt Basin, Idaho and Montana Available to Purchase
A succession of separate tectonic events affected Mesoproterozoic Belt Supergroup strata of NW Montana, just as in the better-displayed Coeur d'Alene Mining District of Idaho. A series of these established a tectonic zone historically known as the Lewis and Clark line, here re-identified as the Lewis and Clark tectonic zone, an apparent product of periodic reactivation of fundamental basement structures and physical constraint of a growth fault on developing folds. Six events identify a partial tectonic history of the west-central Belt Basin. The oldest produced growth faults concentrated along at least two structural lineaments, one of which, the Jocko line, substantially controlled the distribution of subsequent structures; the other, the north-trending Noxon line, is implicated in creation of metal-enriched source rock for Coeur d'Alene veins and provides a marker for right-lateral faulting within the Lewis and Clark tectonic zone. Subsequent deformation produced (1) west-northwest–trending folds, mostly confined to the Lewis and Clark tectonic zone and terminating northward against the Jocko line as the likely result of their having been compressed against this pre–Belt Basin structure; (2) north-trending regional folds, which extend southward from Canada and cross the ultimate Lewis and Clark tectonic zone; (3) foliated shear zones in the Lewis and Clark tectonic zone and associated Coeur d'Alene veins and reverse faults; (4) right-lateral, transcurrent faults, so identified by offsets of the Noxon line, north-trending regional folds, and the Montana overthrust belt and its associated foredeep basin; and, last, (5) Lewis and Clark tectonic zone normal faults and associated kink folds, which extensively reached gigantic, “megakink” proportions. These megakinks locally disrupted all prior structures, greatly confusing local structure; these need to be “unkinked,” so that structures resulting from prior tectonism may be fully recognized and correctly interpreted. Many faults of the Lewis and Clark tectonic zone trend southeasterly in its easterly part, tracking pre–Belt Basin structures separate from those associated with the Jocko line.
Belt-Purcell Basin: Template for the Cordilleran magmatic arc and its detached carapace, Idaho and Montana Available to Purchase
The bedding-plane anisotropy and structural configuration of the Mesoproterozoic Belt-Purcell Supergroup guided a narrow magmatic salient >350 km eastward from the Salmon River suture of Idaho to the foreland basin of central Montana, along a deep graben within the southern part of the Belt-Purcell Basin. The magma assimilated anatectic melt from the lower Belt-Purcell Supergroup in the western half of the graben, where the Lemhi subbasin had intersected and deepened the graben by several kilometers. The magma stepped across the stratigraphic section as it intruded eastward along the graben, spread laterally as it climbed into the overlying Paleozoic and Mesozoic strata, and eventually erupted into the foreland basin. This paper develops a model in which the magma formed a thick, east-tapering wedge beneath the Belt-Purcell carapace. The wedge elevated and tilted its lid, which failed along the trend of the graben to a terminus in the Crazy Mountains basin of the Helena structural salient, much like a tectonic-scale landslide. The carapace failed in two main phases between ca. 100 and 75 Ma. It slid ~100 km during the first failure phase, and ~40 km during the second, when the Boulder batholith and its volcanic cover filled a large pull-apart structure within the carapace. Slaty cleavage, tectonic slides that omit strata, and a nested series of hairpin-shaped allochthons characterize the failed carapace. Shear zones and nappes bound the carapace; the sinistral Lewis and Clark line bounds it on the north, and the dextral southwest Montana transverse zone bounds it on the south. The Lewis thrust fault and associated structures of the Rocky Mountain fold-and-thrust belt overprinted and displaced the magmatic salient and its carapace from ca. 74 to 59 Ma. The magma crystallized, cooled, and generated hydrothermal ore deposits from Late Cretaceous to middle Eocene time. Eocene extension overprinted the system from 53 to 39 Ma and exhumed its infrastructure in core complexes. Those exposures, together with regional structural tilt, enable reconstruction of a deep cross section of the magmatic wedge and its carapace.