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Medicine Bow Orogeny

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Journal Article
Published: 01 January 2000
Rocky Mountain Geology (2000) 35 (1): 71–90.
... the Archean Wyoming province and Proterozoic Colorado province. The time of emplacement of the Horse Creek anorthosite complex coincides with late stages of the Medicine Bow orogeny, in which Proterozoic island arcs collided with the Wyoming province. The Horse Creek anorthosite complex was emplaced in a zone...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 January 1998
Rocky Mountain Geology (1998) 33 (2): 259–277.
... compositional and structural anisotropies that influenced later deformation and magmatism, such as the generation and emplacement of the 1.43-Ga Laramie anorthosite complex and location of Paleozoic diamond-bearing diatremes. In this paper, the term “Medicine Bow orogeny” is proposed to describe the ca. 1.78-Ga...
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Series: Geological Society, London, Special Publications
Published: 01 January 2005
DOI: 10.1144/GSL.SP.2005.245.01.05
EISBN: 9781862394933
... Abstract The Laramie Peak shear system (LPSS) is a 10 km-thick zone of heterogeneous general shear (non-coaxial) that records significant tectonic regeneration of middle-lower crustal rocks of the Archean Wyoming province. The shear system is related to the 1.78–1.74 Ga Medicine Bow orogeny...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 September 2006
The Journal of Geology (2006) 114 (5): 513–531.
...-directed contractional deformation during the 1.78–1.74-Ga Medicine Bow orogeny. e-mail: [email protected] 22 09 2005 29 03 2006 © 2006 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved. 2006 The University of Chicago The goal of this article, therefore, is to begin to attack...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 January 2006
The Journal of Geology (2006) 114 (1): 19–42.
... of the Rocky Mountains experiment). 40 Ar/ 39 Ar and U-Pb data define age patterns in the Sierra Madre that are delineated by discrete structures. North of the 1.78-Ga Divide Peak mylonite zone, a foreland structure associated with the Medicine Bow orogeny, 40 Ar/ 39 Ar biotite dates suggest cooling below 300...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 January 2000
Rocky Mountain Geology (2000) 35 (1): 7–30.
..., plagioclase-phyric, and peridotitic rock types. U-Pb zircon and baddeleyite data indicate that dikes were intruded at 2010 Ma. The dikes were deformed locally and metamorphic zircon replaced igneous baddeleyite to varying degrees during the collisional Medicine Bow orogeny that affected the southern margin...
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Cross-sections of the Medicine Bow Mountains and Sierra Madre illustrating the crustal architecture formed during the Medicine Bow orogeny and subsequent Proterozoic evolution. Seismic reflectors in the lower crust beneath the Medicine Bow Mountains may indicate an underplate (Templeton and Smithson, 1994) related to ca. 1.43-Ga magmatism. There are very few constraints on the Sierra Madre section, but the existence of a décollement, as shown, could explain the cataclastic nature of the Archean-Proterozoic contact and the primitive isotopic compositions from the range. The Sierra Madre is one of the targets for an upcoming geophysical transect.
Published: 01 January 1998
Figure 6. Cross-sections of the Medicine Bow Mountains and Sierra Madre illustrating the crustal architecture formed during the Medicine Bow orogeny and subsequent Proterozoic evolution. Seismic reflectors in the lower crust beneath the Medicine Bow Mountains may indicate an underplate
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Comparison of ages for rocks present along the Cheyenne belt in the Sierra Madre (SM), Medicine Bow Mountains (MB), Laramie Mountains (LM), and Richeau Hills (RH). The Horse Creek anorthosite complex was synchronous with late deformation during the Medicine Bow orogeny. Data from studies by Premo and Van Schmus (1989), Scoates and Chamberlain (1997), and Premo and Loucks (this issue). Numbers within circles are keyed to locations on Figure 13.
Published: 01 January 2000
Figure 12. Comparison of ages for rocks present along the Cheyenne belt in the Sierra Madre (SM), Medicine Bow Mountains (MB), Laramie Mountains (LM), and Richeau Hills (RH). The Horse Creek anorthosite complex was synchronous with late deformation during the Medicine Bow orogeny. Data from
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U-Pb zircon age comparison for rocks of Green Mountain magmatic arc. Ages for arc rocks (∼1780 Ma) are discernible from late syntectonic granitoids and post-tectonic granites (∼1770–1763 Ma) of Medicine Bow orogeny (Chamberlain, 1998). Post-tectonic granites define a separate pulse at ∼1750–1745 Ma. RG, Rambler granite. See text for discussion and caption to Figure 1 for identification of other sampled localities. Red Gran, red granite near Keystone, Medicine Bow Mountains (Premo and Van Schmus, 1989).
Published: 01 January 2000
Figure 3. U-Pb zircon age comparison for rocks of Green Mountain magmatic arc. Ages for arc rocks (∼1780 Ma) are discernible from late syntectonic granitoids and post-tectonic granites (∼1770–1763 Ma) of Medicine Bow orogeny ( Chamberlain, 1998 ). Post-tectonic granites define a separate pulse
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Generalized map of Precambrian rocks in the Black Hills, South Dakota, after Strobel et al. (1999). Faults are from Redden et al. (2008). Metamorphic isograds from Helms and Labotka (1991) and Nabelek et al. (2006). Box in east-central Black Hills indicates study area (Fig. 3). Inset: tectonic province map of North American continent (modified after Whitmeyer and Karlstrom, 2007) with locations of major orogens and Black Hills Uplift. MBO = Medicine Bow Orogeny, CPO = Central Plains Orogeny, and GFTZ = Great Falls tectonic zone.
Published: 01 January 2013
). Inset: tectonic province map of North American continent (modified after Whitmeyer and Karlstrom, 2007 ) with locations of major orogens and Black Hills Uplift. MBO = Medicine Bow Orogeny, CPO = Central Plains Orogeny, and GFTZ = Great Falls tectonic zone.
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A, U-Pb concordia diagrams for the Kennedy diabase; B, periodotite; and C, plagioclase porphyry; together with D, a concordia diagram showing data for samples with baddeleyite rimmed with metamorphic zircon. The data are interpreted to indicate that the Kennedy dike swarm was emplaced at 2.01 Ga, and that metamorphic zircon and sphene grew during regional metamorphism and deformation associated with the Medicine Bow orogeny at 1.76 Ga. The U-Pb system in apatite was also reset during regional metamorphism (this study; Chamberlain and Bowring, in press).
Published: 01 January 2000
swarm was emplaced at 2.01 Ga, and that metamorphic zircon and sphene grew during regional metamorphism and deformation associated with the Medicine Bow orogeny at 1.76 Ga. The U-Pb system in apatite was also reset during regional metamorphism (this study; Chamberlain and Bowring, in press ).
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Geologic sketch map of Precambrian rocks in southeastern Wyoming indicating the locations and sense of motion (where known) of faults active during the Medicine Bow orogeny. The emplacement of the Horse Creek anorthosite complex at the same time as transpression farther north in the Laramie Mountains is best explained by development of a local zone of transtension south of the trace of the Cheyenne belt. HCAC = Horse Creek anorthosite complex; LAC = Laramie anorthosite complex; LPSZ = Laramie Peak shear zone. Numbers within circles are keyed to age determinations given on Figure 12.
Published: 01 January 2000
Figure 13. Geologic sketch map of Precambrian rocks in southeastern Wyoming indicating the locations and sense of motion (where known) of faults active during the Medicine Bow orogeny. The emplacement of the Horse Creek anorthosite complex at the same time as transpression farther north
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Geologic map of the central Laramie Mountains, a high-grade block of Archean crust lying north of the Cheyenne belt and south of the Laramie Peak shear zone. This block was uplifted during the 1.78–1.76 Ga Medicine Bow orogeny. Thermobarometry on supracrustal rocks in this block gives pressures and temperatures in excess of 7 kbar and 650 °C. The orientations of the Kennedy dikes are shown schematically; their true density (10–20% of basement) is under-represented on this figure. The names of the larger peridotite bodies are given along with locations of samples for which data are presented in this paper. Compiled from Snyder, 1984, 1992, 1993, Snyder et al., 1995, 1997a, b, 1998, in press.
Published: 01 January 2000
Figure 2. Geologic map of the central Laramie Mountains, a high-grade block of Archean crust lying north of the Cheyenne belt and south of the Laramie Peak shear zone. This block was uplifted during the 1.78–1.76 Ga Medicine Bow orogeny. Thermobarometry on supracrustal rocks in this block gives
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Location map of available geobarometric determinations related to the Proterozoic evolution of southeastern Wyoming, see text for complete references and discussion; see Fig. 1 for legend. Metamorphic reactions in pelitic assemblages from the Archean block, between the Laramie Peak shear zone (LPSZ) and the trace of the Cheyenne belt (CB), in the Laramie Mountains, are interpreted to reflect uplift and unroofing of that block during the Medicine Bow orogeny (Chamberlain et al., 1993; Resor et al., 1996a; Patel et al., 1998). Schematic P-T plot of thermobarometric data from garnet cores (gt-c) and rims (gt-r) from the central Laramie Mountains is illustrated (adapted from Chamberlain et al., 1993, Patel et al., 1998).
Published: 01 January 1998
shear zone (LPSZ) and the trace of the Cheyenne belt (CB), in the Laramie Mountains, are interpreted to reflect uplift and unroofing of that block during the Medicine Bow orogeny ( Chamberlain et al., 1993 ; Resor et al., 1996a ; Patel et al., 1998 ). Schematic P-T plot of thermobarometric data from
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Cross-sections illustrating the tectonic evolution of the Laramie Mountains during the Medicine Bow orogeny. Solid horizontal line indicates present level of exposure. Subvertical lines represent ca. 2.1-Ga mafic dikes in Archean crust (A). P = Proterozoic crust, ca. 1.78 Ga. A, Tectonic burial of the southern cratonic margin produced Barrovian metamorphism ca. 1.78 Ga. B, Uplift along the Laramie Peak shear zone (LPSZ) at 1.76 Ga (Resor et al., 1996a) produced the present-day juxtaposition of metamorphic blocks north of the Cheyenne belt. The Horse Creek anorthosite complex (HCAC) was emplaced at the same time (1.76 Ga, Scoates and Chamberlain, 1997) within the suture zone. Imbricate stacking of subducted ocean crust (O) may explain the location of the State Line diamond district. See text for more discussion.
Published: 01 January 1998
Figure 5. Cross-sections illustrating the tectonic evolution of the Laramie Mountains during the Medicine Bow orogeny. Solid horizontal line indicates present level of exposure. Subvertical lines represent ca. 2.1-Ga mafic dikes in Archean crust (A). P = Proterozoic crust, ca. 1.78 Ga
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Projection of U-Pb zircon ages onto regional Precambrian geology of Colorado province (modified from Reed et al., 1987). Ages for Big Creek gneiss protolith are coeval to slightly older than main volcano-plutonic terrane of Green Mountain magmatic arc at ∼1790 to 1780 Ma, setting timing of Medicine Bow orogeny (∼1780–1750 Ma) of Chamberlain (1998) soon after arc formation. New age for Boulder Creek batholith at 1714.4 ± 4.6 Ma is consistent with other syndeformational tonalitic plutons within proposed composite back-arc basin of Condie (1982) and Reed et al. (1987), and it helps constrain timing of this style of plutonism between 1735 and 1705 Ma within northern Colorado province, SHRIMP and ID-TIMS zircon analyses of metamorphic overgrowths on zircon grains from the Big Creek gneiss indicate high-grade metamorphism at ∼1610 Ma, an age found only in high-grade terranes within Colorado province.
Published: 01 January 2000
timing of Medicine Bow orogeny (∼1780–1750 Ma) of Chamberlain (1998) soon after arc formation. New age for Boulder Creek batholith at 1714.4 ± 4.6 Ma is consistent with other syndeformational tonalitic plutons within proposed composite back-arc basin of Condie (1982) and Reed et al. (1987
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1965
AAPG Bulletin (1965) 49 (1): 115.
...-Nash Fork shear zone that separates the Medicine Bow Mountains into two major segments. During this second orogeny the Precambrian basement yielded by flexure and passive folding and the older northwestern trend is preserved in one small area south of the Mullen Creek-Nash Fork shear zone...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 December 1968
GSA Bulletin (1968) 79 (12): 1757–1784.
...F. ALLAN HILLS; P. W GAST; R. S HOUSTON; I. G SWAINBANK Abstract The Medicine Bow Mountains of Wyoming are located in a transitional zone between the 2.5 b.y. old Superior Geochronologic Province to the north and the 1.3 to 1.7 b.y. old Central U.S. Geochronologic Province to the south...
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 1998
Rocky Mountain Geology (1998) 32 (2): 181–185.
...Brainerd Mears Abstract The Medicine Bow Mountains, Sierra Madre, and intervening Saratoga Valley have been interpreted as structural features formed chiefly during the Laramide orogeny, but this concept needs revision. In this article, it is argued that Laramide regional contraction created...
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Generalized geologic map of Sierra Madre and Medicine Bow Mountains, southeastern Wyoming. Cheyenne-belt suture separates Colorado province from Wyoming province. Modified from Houston and Graff (1995) and Houston and Karlstrom (1992). Foliations in layered rocks of Colorado province are subparallel to shear zones in Cheyenne belt. Proposed area for Medicine Bow event of Colorado orogeny.
Published: 01 January 2003
province are subparallel to shear zones in Cheyenne belt. Proposed area for Medicine Bow event of Colorado orogeny.