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Palmer Canyon Block

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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
... shear (non-coaxial) involving high-strain zones and multiple folding events yielded a broad, en-masse uplift (Palmer Canyon block) during the late stages of the Medicine Bow orogeny. The LPSS is thus an excellent example of how crystal-plastic strain is distributed in sialic crust during an oceanic arc...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 June 2009
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2009) 99 (3): 1953–1961.
... Proterozoic Moho. We speculate that imbrication of the Proterozoic lower crust was contemporaneous with the 1.76 Ga uplift and deformation of the 50 km-wide Palmer Canyon block immediately north of the Cheyenne belt exposed in the Laramie Mountains. Our P -wave receiver function dataset is constructed from...
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Map of Precambrian rocks in southeastern Wyoming, including the Laramie, Medicine Bow, and Sierra Madre Mountains (modified from Resor and Snoke 2005). The Palmer Canyon block is the large area of Archean gneissic rocks in the central Laramie Mountains. Archean greenstone belts discussed in the text include Johnson Mountain (JM), Brandel Creek (BC), and Elmers Rock (ER). H=Hartville  uplift.
Published: 01 September 2006
Figure 1. Map of Precambrian rocks in southeastern Wyoming, including the Laramie, Medicine Bow, and Sierra Madre Mountains (modified from Resor and Snoke 2005 ). The Palmer Canyon block is the large area of Archean gneissic rocks in the central Laramie Mountains. Archean greenstone belts
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Topography, stations, and crustal shear zones. Geographic features denoted as: Sierra Madres, SM; Medicine Bow Mountains, MB; Laramie Mountains, LM. In the Laramie Mountains, the Palmer Canyon block (PCB) and Laramie Peak block (LPB) are labeled. The black dashed line denotes the CDROM refraction line and the nearby triangles are the broadband seismometers. The Cheyenne belt suture (CB) is the white line, dashed where inferred. Other major shear zones are denoted with gray lines: Laramie Peak shear zone, LPSZ; Farwell Mountain–Lester Mountain suture zone, FLSZ; Soda Creek-Fish Creek shear zone, SFSZ; Skin Gulch shear zone, SGSZ. The location of the Stateline Kimberlite District (SLKD) and Iron Mountain District (IMD) are shaded red.
Published: 01 June 2009
Figure 1. Topography, stations, and crustal shear zones. Geographic features denoted as: Sierra Madres, SM ; Medicine Bow Mountains, MB ; Laramie Mountains, LM . In the Laramie Mountains, the Palmer Canyon block ( PCB ) and Laramie Peak block ( LPB ) are labeled. The black dashed line denotes
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 2006
The Journal of Geology (2006) 114 (5): 513–531.
...Figure 1. Map of Precambrian rocks in southeastern Wyoming, including the Laramie, Medicine Bow, and Sierra Madre Mountains (modified from Resor and Snoke 2005 ). The Palmer Canyon block is the large area of Archean gneissic rocks in the central Laramie Mountains. Archean greenstone belts...
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Figure 10. Geologic map of the paleovalley at Nanny Creek, east side of the Pequop Mountains (Brooks et al., 1995b; this study) with 40Ar/39Ar dates from this study (regular type) and Brooks et al. (1995a, 1995b; italics). The paleovalley, which was at least 6 km wide and possibly 1.6 km deep, has basal conglomerate containing rounded boulders up to 6 m in diameter, overlain by the plagioclase-biotite tuff and tuff of Big Cottonwood Canyon, andesite lavas, and a thick megabreccia consisting of angular blocks mostly of the tuff of Big Cottonwood Canyon. That megabreccia consists of reworked blocks is confirmed by petrographic, chemical, 40Ar/39Ar, and paleomagnetic data (this study; M.R. Hudson, in Brooks et al., 1995a; Palmer and MacDonald, 2002).
Published: 01 February 2008
deep, has basal conglomerate containing rounded boulders up to 6 m in diameter, overlain by the plagioclase-biotite tuff and tuff of Big Cottonwood Canyon, andesite lavas, and a thick megabreccia consisting of angular blocks mostly of the tuff of Big Cottonwood Canyon. That megabreccia consists
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Figure 11. Geologic map of part of the Eocene paleovalley in the Windermere Hills (modified from Mueller, 1993, with 40Ar/39Ar dates from Mueller et al., 1999). Imbricated clasts in cobble conglomerate (Tdc) indicate eastward flow (Mueller, 1992). Mueller (1993) and Mueller et al. (1999) interpreted major normal faults repeating the ash-flow tuffs along the west side of this map. I reinterpret these as megabreccia (Tx) composed of blocks of the plagioclase-biotite tuff and tuff of Big Cottonwood Canyon. That they are blocks is confirmed by petrography, chemical analysis, discordant compaction foliations, and by scattered magnetization directions (Palmer and MacDonald, 2002). Therefore, their stratigraphic position and the amount of repetition by faulting are uncertain.
Published: 01 February 2008
. (1999) interpreted major normal faults repeating the ash-flow tuffs along the west side of this map. I reinterpret these as megabreccia (Tx) composed of blocks of the plagioclase-biotite tuff and tuff of Big Cottonwood Canyon. That they are blocks is confirmed by petrography, chemical analysis
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 April 2017
Geology (2017) 45 (4): e412.
... and geophysical study. REFERENCES CITED Allard, S.T., 2003, Geologic evolution of Archean and Paleoproterozoic rocks in the northern Palmer Canyon block, central Laramie Mountains, Albany County, Wyoming [Ph.D. thesis]: Laramie, University of Wyoming, 389 p. Allard, S.T., and Portis, D.H., 2013, Paleoproterozoic...
Journal Article
Published: 01 July 2001
Journal of Paleontology (2001) 75 (4): 890–894.
..., Middle Miocene ( Fig. 1 ). Mule Canyon, Calico Mountains, Mojave Desert, San Bernardino County, California, USA. USNM 510565 (7-25-00). A single genus and species of Dytiscidae has been described from these deposits, Schistomerus californense Palmer. This species was described from...
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Journal Article
Published: 09 July 2009
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2009) 46 (5): 355–360.
.... Palmer’s types (1965 , pl. 1, figs. 16, 18, 19) of Pseudokingstonia exotica are from a single collection (United States Geological Survey (USGS) 2977-CO) at “Granite Canyon” in the northern House Range, Utah. No information was provided on the associated fauna, if any, although Palmer indicated...
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Journal Article
Journal: Geosphere
Published: 01 February 2008
Geosphere (2008) 4 (1): 1–35.
... deep, has basal conglomerate containing rounded boulders up to 6 m in diameter, overlain by the plagioclase-biotite tuff and tuff of Big Cottonwood Canyon, andesite lavas, and a thick megabreccia consisting of angular blocks mostly of the tuff of Big Cottonwood Canyon. That megabreccia consists...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 11 November 1999
AAPG Bulletin (1999) 83 (11): 1795–1834.
... time, producing an extensive three-dimensional system of passages ( Figure 1 ). Vadose canyons, shafts, and fissures connect the different levels. Ford and Williams (1989 , p. 274–278), Palmer (1991 , 1995 ), and Smart and Whitaker (1991) presented several examples of modern cave systems...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2009
Journal of Paleontology (2009) 83 (2): 197–218.
... also Webster et al., 2003 ). Providence Mountains, San Bernardino County: UCR 7003 (bulk collection), and upper portion of the Latham Shale ( Webster et al., 2003 ). Grapevine Mountains, Inyo County: Titanothere Canyon section, LACMIP locality 24908, USGS collections 4144-CO and 7183-CO ( Palmer...
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Journal Article
Journal: Geosphere
Published: 01 August 2014
Geosphere (2014) 10 (4): 627–640.
..., 2007 ) and Cave Geology ( Palmer, 2007a ). Thus our paper breaks new ground in that it describes a mechanism for the development of landforms like the Grand Canyon that have not previously been considered as having been caused by, or related to, karst. Names that refer to canyons existing...
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Journal Article
Published: 30 August 2007
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2007) 44 (7): 987–1003.
... comparisons between species that yielded significant differences (comparisons made using the method described by Imbrie 1956 and Jones 1988 ). The type section of the Orr Formation ( Hintze and Palmer 1976 , fig. 4) extends along a ridge on the north side of Big Horse Canyon, at the eastern end of Orr...
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Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 14 February 2020
Geology (2020) 48 (5): 425–430.
... . Noble , L.F. , 1922 , A Section of the Paleozoic Formations of the Grand Canyon at Bass Trail : U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 131-B , p. 23 – 73 . Palmer , A.R. , 1965 , Trilobites of the Late Cambrian Pterocephaliid Biomere in the Great Basin, United States : U.S...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 December 2011
AAPG Bulletin (2011) 95 (12): 2061–2083.
..., canyons, and chambers (rooms), which commonly contain breakdown breccia and cave-sediment fill. Cave sediments result mainly from sediment originating outside the cave system and later being transported into the cave. Figure 5 A block diagram of near-surface karst terrain, including surface...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 May 1953
AAPG Bulletin (1953) 37 (5): 889–912.
.... 350–53, 357–59) were visited by the writers and A. R. Palmer mainly to ascertain whether the Clinetop algal limestone member extends far outside the White River Plateau. The localities are: (1) at Taylor Pass, about Sec. 10, T. 12 S., R. 84 W., approximately 45 miles south-southeast of Glenwood Canyon...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 February 1970
AAPG Bulletin (1970) 54 (2): 275–284.
... Canyon Formation (new name), consisting of intensely deformed limestone, argillaceous siltstone, and phyllite, is about 2,000 ft thick. Antelope Valley Limestone, up to 800 ft thick, contains the Palliseria assemblage (Middle Ordovician) near the top in two areas. Remnants of the Silurian Masket Shale...
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Journal Article
Published: 27 March 2024
Bulletin de la Société Géologique de France (2025) 195 (1): 4.
... reculées qui capturent progressivement le bassin d’alimentation voisin drainé vers le NE (canyon de la Vis). Enfin, les altérites résiduelles sont évacuées sous le niveau de la source de trop plein par un mécanisme de mise en charge dans la zone épinoyée. Ces différents mécanismes d’évacuation renseignent...
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