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Lost Cabin Beds

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Journal Article
Published: 01 May 1966
Journal of Paleontology (1966) 40 (3): 740–742.
...Leonard B. Radinsky Abstract Selenaletes scopaeus, a new genus and species of helaletid, is based upon a lower jaw fragment, probably from Lost Cabin beds, Wind River Basin, Wyo. Other material from Wyoming and Colorado provides knowledge of DP 4 and P 4 - M 3 . Generic diagnosis is: tiny...
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Detrital zircon U-Pb results from Lake Mohave and Cottonwood Valley. Sample locations are shown in Figure 5B and listed in Table 3. (A–I) Relative probability plots. (A) Bullhead alluvium sample 30 (06322–37). (B) Bullhead alluvium sample 29 (06322–6). (C) Bullhead alluvium sample 26 (32103–1). (D) Bullhead alluvium sample 27 (320013–13). (E) Bouse Formation sample 28 (32003–7). (F) Bouse Formation sample 25 (32506–1). (G) Sub-Bouse fluvial sediments sample 23 (32706–3). (H) Late Miocene Lost Cabin Beds sample 24 (32306–175). (I) Cumulative probability plots of above samples; also includes Holocene Colorado River (HCR) reference. Samples 26, 28, 29, and 30 are included in PCR reference.
Published: 01 December 2015
26 (32103–1). (D) Bullhead alluvium sample 27 (320013–13). (E) Bouse Formation sample 28 (32003–7). (F) Bouse Formation sample 25 (32506–1). (G) Sub-Bouse fluvial sediments sample 23 (32706–3). (H) Late Miocene Lost Cabin Beds sample 24 (32306–175). (I) Cumulative probability plots of above samples
... mountains (Tfn and Tfb1; Newberry and Black Mountain fanglomerate); (2) axial valley facies, including fine gravel from the Black and Newberry Mountains interfingered with valley-filling silt and sand deposits (Tlcc and Tlcf; the Lost Cabin beds, found only in Cottonwood Valley); (3) gravelly alluvial fills...
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Longitudinal profile of elevations of exposed Pliocene Bullhead Alluvium (dots) and tentatively identified exposed and subsurface Bullhead Alluvium (squares) projected to the historic Colorado River (red curve from La Rue, 1925). Bedrock canyons are shown in gray. Pre-Bullhead Bouse Formation lakes are from Spencer et al. (2013). Dated pre-Bullhead units (Table 1) restrict the Bullhead strata to be younger than 6.0 Ma Hualapai Limestone in Temple Basin, younger than 5.6 Ma Lost Cabin beds that underlie Bouse Formation in Cottonwood Valley, and younger than 4.8 Ma Bouse Formation in Blythe Basin. (A) Bullhead profile II is the estimated top of the Bullhead Alluvium. Bullhead profile I at the base of the aggradation sequence is bracketed between the lowest exposures (typically near modern river level) and uncertainly correlated subsurface occurrences (see Table A1). Pre-Bullhead Bouse Formation, Miocene rocks, or basement below undated Colorado River deposits at dam sites and other locales in the valley thalweg limit the maximum possible depths of Bullhead strata (blue Xs). (B) Dates (red, in Ma) in the Bullhead strata are from Faulds et al. (2001), House et al. (2008b), and Matmon et al. (2012); dated speleothems are from Polyak et al. (2008; elevations from Polyak, 2013, written commun.). Envelopes on the elevation extent of the late Pleistocene Chemehuevi Formation (0.07 Ma; Malmon et al., 2011) are shown for comparison with the Bullhead profiles.
Published: 01 February 2015
Formation lakes are from Spencer et al. (2013) . Dated pre-Bullhead units ( Table 1 ) restrict the Bullhead strata to be younger than 6.0 Ma Hualapai Limestone in Temple Basin, younger than 5.6 Ma Lost Cabin beds that underlie Bouse Formation in Cottonwood Valley, and younger than 4.8 Ma Bouse Formation
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FIGURE 1—Location and stratigraphy of the Lower Triassic Virgin Limestone Member, Moenkopi Formation, Nevada. A) General stratigraphic column of the Virgin Limestone Member measured at the Lost Cabin Springs locality (modified from Pruss and Bottjer, 2004a, 2004b; Pruss et al., 2005b). B) Location map showing Lost Cabin Springs (36°04′56″N, 115°39′11″W) and Mountain Pass localities (35°28′28″N, 115°32′32″W). C) Detailed stratigraphy of carbonate beds above and below the spheroid-bearing strata; flooding surface occurs directly above the unit containing mudcracks and abundant microbial spheroids
Published: 01 February 2009
) Location map showing Lost Cabin Springs (36°04′56″N, 115°39′11″W) and Mountain Pass localities (35°28′28″N, 115°32′32″W). C) Detailed stratigraphy of carbonate beds above and below the spheroid-bearing strata; flooding surface occurs directly above the unit containing mudcracks and abundant microbial
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FIGURE 2—Field photographs of microbial spheroids and associated carbonate facies. A) Abundant spheroids preserved on a mud-cracked and burrowed bedding plane. B) Overview of mud-cracked (see arrow) bedding plane. C) Spheroids occurring in a lens just below bedding plane surface. D) Spheroids (arrows) exposed in cross section at Lost Cabin Springs
Published: 01 February 2009
(arrows) exposed in cross section at Lost Cabin Springs
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FIGURE 3—Stratigraphic sections of the Dinwoody Formation at the Hidden Pasture locality and the Virgin limestone from the Lost Cabin locality. Notice the increased variety of shell beds in the Virgin Formation (Abbreviations: m = mudstone, st = siltstone, vf = very fine sandstone, w = wackestone, p = packstone, sb = shell bed)
Published: 01 August 2004
FIGURE 3 —Stratigraphic sections of the Dinwoody Formation at the Hidden Pasture locality and the Virgin limestone from the Lost Cabin locality. Notice the increased variety of shell beds in the Virgin Formation (Abbreviations: m = mudstone, st = siltstone, vf = very fine sandstone, w = wackestone
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FIGURE 5—Representative size-frequency diagrams recording the length of single species of Permophorus and Promyalina from bedding-plane surfaces of shell beds from the Virgin limestone at two localities (Hurricane, Lost Cabin). Skewed distribution is consistent with a fossil population. A: n=145, B: n = 55, C: n = 95, and D: n = 31
Published: 01 August 2004
FIGURE 5 —Representative size-frequency diagrams recording the length of single species of Permophorus and Promyalina from bedding-plane surfaces of shell beds from the Virgin limestone at two localities (Hurricane, Lost Cabin). Skewed distribution is consistent with a fossil population. A: n
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 22 February 2021
Geology (2021) 49 (6): 635–640.
...), but this could be explained by high flux gradients during irradiation where individual grains do not receive the exact same neutron flux. We also present magnetostratigraphy across a key ash bed in the upper Lost Cabin beds. Age constraints are organized geographically from upstream to downstream. We dated...
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First thumbnail for: Redefining the age of the lower Colorado River, so...
Second thumbnail for: Redefining the age of the lower Colorado River, so...
Third thumbnail for: Redefining the age of the lower Colorado River, so...
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FIGURE 6—Size of trace fossils in the Virgin Limestone Member. Measured bedding planes are indicated on Figure 4; MM-O is Muddy Mountains–Overton locality, LCS is Lost Cabin Springs locality. (A) Histograms showing distribution of Planolites burrow diameters from two bedding planes at MM-O; bottom histogram shows compiled data from both bedding planes. (B) Histogram showing the distribution of Rhizocorallium burrow widths from one bedding plane at MM-O. (C) Histograms showing distribution of Thalassinoides burrow diameters from two bedding planes at LCS and two bedding planes from MM-O. Bottom histogram shows the compiled data from all bedding planes
Published: 01 December 2004
FIGURE 6 —Size of trace fossils in the Virgin Limestone Member. Measured bedding planes are indicated on Figure 4 ; MM-O is Muddy Mountains–Overton locality, LCS is Lost Cabin Springs locality. (A) Histograms showing distribution of Planolites burrow diameters from two bedding planes at MM-O
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—Map of northwest Wyoming showing explanation for distribution of volcanic débris in beds of Lost Cabin age in Bighorn and Wind River basins. Isopach contours of Recent pumice fall described by Williams have been superimposed, with Mount Mazama (M), souce of pumice fall, centered in probable area of one or more volcanoes which erupted most of volcanic material in Wind River formation. Map also shows inferred drainage of Wind River and Bighorn basins.
Published: 01 August 1956
FIG. 11. —Map of northwest Wyoming showing explanation for distribution of volcanic débris in beds of Lost Cabin age in Bighorn and Wind River basins. Isopach contours of Recent pumice fall described by Williams have been superimposed, with Mount Mazama (M), souce of pumice fall, centered
Journal Article
Journal: Geosphere
Published: 01 December 2014
Geosphere (2014) 10 (6): 1139–1160.
... of the underlying fine-grained basin-fill deposits informally named the Lost Cabin beds ( House et al., 2005 ) and the lowest Bouse outcrop on distal alluvial fan deposits. Figure 3. Map illustrating the paleogeography and drainage systems of Cottonwood and Mohave Valleys prior to the arrival of Colorado...
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First thumbnail for: Paleogeomorphology and evolution of the early Colo...
Second thumbnail for: Paleogeomorphology and evolution of the early Colo...
Third thumbnail for: Paleogeomorphology and evolution of the early Colo...
Journal Article
Journal: PALAIOS
Published: 01 February 2009
PALAIOS (2009) 24 (2): 131–136.
...) Location map showing Lost Cabin Springs (36°04′56″N, 115°39′11″W) and Mountain Pass localities (35°28′28″N, 115°32′32″W). C) Detailed stratigraphy of carbonate beds above and below the spheroid-bearing strata; flooding surface occurs directly above the unit containing mudcracks and abundant microbial...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: EARLY TRIASSIC MICROBIAL SPHEROIDS IN THE VIRGIN L...
Second thumbnail for: EARLY TRIASSIC MICROBIAL SPHEROIDS IN THE VIRGIN L...
Third thumbnail for: EARLY TRIASSIC MICROBIAL SPHEROIDS IN THE VIRGIN L...
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 September 2021
Geology (2021) 49 (9): e532–e533.
... | httpspubs.geoscienceworld.org/geology/ e532 Forum Reply Roberts, A.P., 2015, Magnetic mineral diagenesis: Earth-Science Reviews, v. 151, p. 1 47, httpsdoi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2015.09.010. Schwing, J., 2021, Magnetostratigraphy of the Pre-Colorado Integration Lost Cabin Beds, Cottonwood, Valley, Arizona: Arizona Geological...
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 August 2012
Geology (2012) 40 (8): 715–718.
... described the microbialite mounds from the two stromatolite beds as “disaster taxa” (but see Kershaw et al., 2009 ) that exploited the absence of metazoan grazers following the end-Permian mass extinction. Pruss and Bottjer (2004) argued that the lower stromatolite unit at Lost Cabin Spring was a set...
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First thumbnail for: Paleoecology and geochemistry of Early Triassic (S...
Second thumbnail for: Paleoecology and geochemistry of Early Triassic (S...
Third thumbnail for: Paleoecology and geochemistry of Early Triassic (S...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 August 1956
AAPG Bulletin (1956) 40 (8): 1863–1898.
...FIG. 11. —Map of northwest Wyoming showing explanation for distribution of volcanic débris in beds of Lost Cabin age in Bighorn and Wind River basins. Isopach contours of Recent pumice fall described by Williams have been superimposed, with Mount Mazama (M), souce of pumice fall, centered...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Pitchfork Formation, Detrital Facies of Early Basi...
Second thumbnail for: Pitchfork Formation, Detrital Facies of Early Basi...
Third thumbnail for: Pitchfork Formation, Detrital Facies of Early Basi...
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Examples of the basal and perimeter Bouse carbonate deposits. (A) 1-m-thick basal carbonate over oxidized fanglomerate at ∼180 m above sea level (asl), Park Moabi area. (B) 0.5–1-m-thick basal carbonate over oxidized fanglomerate layers at ∼400 m asl, north of Lost Cabin Wash in Cottonwood Valley. (C) Oxidized rounded locally derived gravel form a surface lag above basal Bouse carbonate at ∼490 m asl, northern Mohave Valley. (D) Massive tufa deposit on bedrock at 552 m asl, Silver Creek (∼10-cm plush toy for scale). (E) Exposure of basal carbonate over oxidized fanglomerate at 530 m asl, Silver Creek (note person for scale); overlying indurated fanglomerate is on erosion surface cut on Bouse deposits, including small channels cut into and through the Bouse deposits. (F) Farther east at 550 m asl, white Bouse limestone beds are on local fanglomerate and are interbedded with tan local sand and gravel fanglomerate, with more gravel higher in section (section is 8–10 m thick) These deposits clearly record interplay between local tributary deposition, quiet-water lacustrine deposition, and probably wave reworking of the clastic deposits.
Published: 01 December 2014
Figure 7. Examples of the basal and perimeter Bouse carbonate deposits. (A) 1-m-thick basal carbonate over oxidized fanglomerate at ∼180 m above sea level (asl), Park Moabi area. (B) 0.5–1-m-thick basal carbonate over oxidized fanglomerate layers at ∼400 m asl, north of Lost Cabin Wash
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 December 1962
AAPG Bulletin (1962) 46 (12): 2161–2173.
.... The La Barge Member is of Lysite(?) and Lost Cabin, or middle(?) and late early Eocene age. The conglomerate member of the Wasatch Formation, which includes diamictite, sandstone, and mudstone, as well as conglomerate, is present only along the periphery of the Green River Basin. It is laterally...
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First thumbnail for: Main Body of Wasatch Formation Near La Barge, Wyom...
Second thumbnail for: Main Body of Wasatch Formation Near La Barge, Wyom...
Third thumbnail for: Main Body of Wasatch Formation Near La Barge, Wyom...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 November 1941
AAPG Bulletin (1941) 25 (11): 2021–2045.
... found a faunule indicating Lost Cabin (upper Wind River) age. Below it, near the base of the Wasatch, he also found Homogalax diagnostic of Granger’s Gray Bull faunal zone. Vertebrate fossils were found by Jepsen 31 in the tuffaceous beds in the lower part of the “early basic breccia...
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First thumbnail for: HEART MOUNTAIN AND SOUTH FORK THRUSTS, PARK COUNTY...
Second thumbnail for: HEART MOUNTAIN AND SOUTH FORK THRUSTS, PARK COUNTY...
Third thumbnail for: HEART MOUNTAIN AND SOUTH FORK THRUSTS, PARK COUNTY...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 January 2006
GSA Bulletin (2006) 118 (1-2): 159–170.
... of Bateman (1965) and Bateman and Moore (1965) , who mapped the Bishop Creek pendant; Rinehart and Ross (1964) , who mapped and studied the stratigraphy of the Mount Morrison pendant; and Kistler (1966a , 1966b ), who mapped the Log Cabin Mine and Gull Lake pendants. Stevens and Greene (1999...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Development and dismemberment of a Middle Devonian...
Second thumbnail for: Development and dismemberment of a Middle Devonian...
Third thumbnail for: Development and dismemberment of a Middle Devonian...