Classic Concepts and New Directions: Exploring 125 Years of GSA Discoveries in the Rocky Mountain Region

The Rocky Mountain Region has been the subject of continuous, exhaustive scientific work since the first organized geologic trips to the area began in the 1860s. Despite almost 150 years of scrutiny, the region's magnificent geology continues to challenge, perplex, and astound modern geoscientists. It is a testing ground for geologists and for big geologic ideas. This volume, prepared for the 2013 GSA Annual Meeting in Denver, Colorado, serves both as a progress report on what we have learned over those years of study and a guide to forthcoming scientific questions about the region. The guide's fourteen chapters, which span the region's 1.7-billion-year history, give a retrospective glimpse of early geologic ideas being forged, bring the latest mapping and analytical results from classic locations, and introduce techniques that will form the bedrock of our geologic understanding in the years to come.
Transect of the Sevier and Laramide orogenic belts, northern Utah to Wyoming: Evolution of a complex geodynamic system
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Published:January 01, 2013
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CiteCitation
Adolph Yonkee, Arlo Brandon Weil, Gautam Mitra, 2013. "Transect of the Sevier and Laramide orogenic belts, northern Utah to Wyoming: Evolution of a complex geodynamic system", Classic Concepts and New Directions: Exploring 125 Years of GSA Discoveries in the Rocky Mountain Region, Lon D. Abbott, Gregory S. Hancock
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Abstract
The Sevier fold-thrust belt and Laramide foreland comprise two interrelated mountain systems that formed during subduction-related orogenesis along the Cordillera margin of western North America. This field trip integrates field observations from across the two mountain systems with results of recent detailed structural and paleomagnetic studies to develop a tectonic model for evolution of these two classic belts and their relations to plate dynamics. Within the Sevier belt, regional structural relations, synorogenic sedimentation, patterns of internal strain in limestones, and paleomagnetically determined vertical-axis rotations and anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) in red beds are examined to better understand processes that lead to systematic curvature in thrust belts. Widespread early layer-parallel shortening (LPS) was accommodated by spaced cleavage, fracture sets, minor folds, and minor faults. LPS directions are subperpendicular to structural trends of systematically curved, thin-skin thrust sheets of the Wyoming salient, reflecting a combination of primary dispersion about an average E-W direction and secondary rotation during thrusting. Rotation was concentrated along the front of a forward propagating wedge, where tectonic stress transmitted from the hinterland, topographic-related stresses, and along strike variations in sedimentary thickness, lithology, and fault strength led to curved thrust slip and differential shortening. Within the Laramide foreland, structural styles of basement-cored arches, sedimentation in basins, paleostress/strain patterns, and combined AMS and paleomagnetism of red beds are examined to test models of foreland deformation and relations to flat slab subduction. Limited LPS was accommodated mostly by minor faults with conjugate wedge and strike-slip geometries. Estimated paleostress directions have a regional WSW-ENE average, but vary from perpendicular to acute to variably trending, thick-skin basement-cored arches. Steep forelimbs display more complex relations, including younger fault sets that developed during evolving stress states and localized, limited vertical-axis rotations. Variations in arch trends and LPS directions are interpreted to partly reflect basal traction during flat-slab subduction beneath thick cratonic lithosphere, combined with spatial-temporal variations in stress/strain fields related to basement heterogeneities and evolving fault systems.
- anisotropy
- arches
- carbonate rocks
- Cenozoic
- clastic rocks
- cleavage
- Cretaceous
- crustal shortening
- faults
- field trips
- folds
- foliation
- forelands
- fractures
- geodynamics
- kinematics
- Laramide Orogeny
- limestone
- magnetic properties
- magnetic susceptibility
- Mesozoic
- orogenic belts
- orogeny
- Paleogene
- paleomagnetism
- paleostress
- plate tectonics
- red beds
- sedimentary rocks
- sedimentation
- Sevier orogenic belt
- stratigraphy
- stress
- structural analysis
- subduction
- tectonics
- Tertiary
- United States
- Utah
- Wyoming