Through the Generations

The tradition of Rocky Mountain geology remains strong at all scales, spatially and temporally. This volume fosters that tradition with its collection of peer-reviewed papers associated with the 2010 GSA Annual Meeting in Denver, Colorado. Spatially, this volume discusses theories of continental mountain building events in tandem with microscopic observations and parts per billion trace element concentrations. Temporally, the volume covers geologic history from the Precambrian to modern issues of climate change and energy, groundwater contamination, geologic hazards, and landscape evolution. Many of the trips propose new interpretations of famous geologic ideas and environs such as Laramide deformation, the Colorado Mineral Belt, the Lewis and Clark Line, the Chalk Cliffs, and Garden of the Gods.
Beyond Colorado’s Front Range—A new look at Laramide basin subsidence, sedimentation, and deformation in north-central Colorado
-
Published:January 01, 2010
-
CiteCitation
James C. Cole, James H. Trexler, Jr., Patricia H. Cashman, Ian M. Miller, Ralph R. Shroba, Michael A. Cosca, Jeremiah B. Workman, 2010. "Beyond Colorado’s Front Range—A new look at Laramide basin subsidence, sedimentation, and deformation in north-central Colorado", Through the Generations, Lisa A. Morgan, Steven L. Quane
Download citation file:
- Share
Abstract
This field trip highlights recent research into the Laramide uplift, erosion, and sedimentation on the western side of the northern Colorado Front Range. The Laramide history of the North Park-Middle Park basin (designated the Colorado Headwaters Basin in this paper) is distinctly different from that of the Denver basin on the eastern flank of the range. The Denver basin stratigraphy records the transition from Late Cretaceous marine shale to recessional shoreline sandstones to continental, fluvial, marsh, and coal mires environments, followed by orogenic sediments that span the K-T boundary. Upper Cretaceous and Paleogene strata in the Denver basin consist of two mega-fan complexes that are separated by a 9 million-year interval of erosion/non-deposition between about 63 and 54 Ma.
In contrast, the marine shale unit on the western flank of the Front Range was deeply eroded over most of the area of the Colorado Headwaters Basin (approximately one km removed) prior to any orogenic sediment accumulation. New 40Ar-39Ar ages indicate the oldest sediments on the western flank of the Front Range were as young as about 61 Ma. They comprise the Windy Gap Volcanic Member of the Middle Park Formation, which consists of coarse, immature volcanic conglomerates derived from nearby alkalic-mafic volcanic edifices that were forming at about 6561 Ma. Clasts of Proterozoic granite, pegmatite, and gneiss (eroded from the uplifted at Laramide basin subsidence, sedimentation, and deformation in north-central Colorado, in Morgan, L.A., and Quane, S.L., eds., Through the Generations: core of the Front Range) seem to arrive in the Colorado Headwaters Basin at different times in different places, but they become dominant in arkosic sandstones and conglomerates about one km above the base of the Colorado Headwaters Basin section. Paleocurrent trends suggest the southern end of the Colorado Headwaters Basin was structurally closed because all fluvial deposits show a northward component of transport. Lacustrine depositional environments are indicated by various sedimentological features in several sections within the >3 km of sediment preserved in the Colorado Headwaters Basin, suggesting this basin may have remained closed throughout the Paleocene and early Eocene.
The field trip also addresses middle Eocene(?) folding of the late Laramide basin-fill strata, related to steep reverse faults that offset the Proterozoic crystalline basement.
Late Oligocene magmatic activity is indicated by dikes, plugs, and eruptive volcanic rocks in the Rabbit Ears Range and the Never Summer Mountains that span and flank the Colorado Headwaters Basin. These intrusions and eruptions were accompanied by extensional faulting along predominantly northwesterly trends. Erosion accompanied the late Oligocene igneous activity and faulting, leading to deposition of boulder conglomerates and sandstones of the North Park Formation and high-level conglomerates across the landscape that preserve evidence of a paleo-drainage network that drained the volcanic landscape.
- absolute age
- Ammonoidea
- Ar/Ar
- basin analysis
- basins
- Cenozoic
- Cephalopoda
- clastic rocks
- Colorado
- dates
- faults
- field trips
- folds
- Front Range
- guidebook
- Invertebrata
- Laramide Orogeny
- Mollusca
- new names
- North America
- Paleocene
- Paleogene
- Plantae
- road log
- Rocky Mountains
- sedimentary rocks
- sedimentation
- shale
- subsidence
- tectonic elements
- Tertiary
- U. S. Rocky Mountains
- United States
- north-central Colorado
- Middle Park Formation
- Colorado Headwaters Basin