Balanced and Restored Cross-Sections Representing Post-Miocene Crustal Extension of Fluvial Deposits, North-Central Montana to Southeast Idaho

This research is part of a larger project based on the theory of the existence of a pre-ice age, Amazon-scale river that had headwaters in the southern Colorado Plateau and flowed north through the western United States and Canada before discharging into the Labrador Sea. Stream-rounded fluvial depo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Johnson, Benjamin B, Mr., Schuhmacher, Dain A., Mason, Gerri K., Rodriguez, Thomas R, Mr, Subatch, Jason J.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: ScholarWorks at University of Montana 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.umt.edu/umcur/2014/poster_2/17
https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/umcur/article/1024/viewcontent/UMCUR_POSTER_FINAL_SUBMIT.pdf
id ftunivmontana:oai:scholarworks.umt.edu:umcur-1024
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivmontana:oai:scholarworks.umt.edu:umcur-1024 2023-07-16T03:59:25+02:00 Balanced and Restored Cross-Sections Representing Post-Miocene Crustal Extension of Fluvial Deposits, North-Central Montana to Southeast Idaho Johnson, Benjamin B, Mr. Schuhmacher, Dain A. Mason, Gerri K. Rodriguez, Thomas R, Mr Subatch, Jason J. 2014-04-11T22:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarworks.umt.edu/umcur/2014/poster_2/17 https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/umcur/article/1024/viewcontent/UMCUR_POSTER_FINAL_SUBMIT.pdf unknown ScholarWorks at University of Montana https://scholarworks.umt.edu/umcur/2014/poster_2/17 https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/umcur/article/1024/viewcontent/UMCUR_POSTER_FINAL_SUBMIT.pdf University of Montana Conference on Undergraduate Research (UMCUR) text 2014 ftunivmontana 2023-06-27T22:44:17Z This research is part of a larger project based on the theory of the existence of a pre-ice age, Amazon-scale river that had headwaters in the southern Colorado Plateau and flowed north through the western United States and Canada before discharging into the Labrador Sea. Stream-rounded fluvial deposits in Montana and Idaho provide evidence of sediment provenance in Nevada and Utah, as there are no confirmed bedrock sources for these sediments in Montana or Idaho. The Miocene river bed has been offset and tilted by dozens of extensional faults in the region. Some faults bound large mountain ranges including the Lost River, Lemhi, Beaverhead, Tendoy, Blacktail Deer, Ruby, Madison, and Big Belt Mountains. The reconstructed trend of the Miocene river bed provides a reference line against which to measure active faulting. We constructed five balanced cross-sections of the deformed subsurface along the Miocene river bed from north-central Montana to southeast Idaho across the faulted mountain ranges and restored the cross-sections to represent an un-deformed subsurface. This provided valuable insight into crustal deformation in these regions. Knowing the timing and extent of crustal deformation has many scientific and societal benefits. Western Montana and adjacent Idaho occupy the Inter-mountain Seismic Zone and have the potential for large earthquakes. Detailed cross-sections through this zone can provide information for development projects in faulted areas, and target potential aquifer locations where the thick river gravel has been down-faulted into the sub-surface. This research will be an important contribution to understanding the evolution of the tectonic landscape of Montana and Idaho. Text Labrador Sea University of Montana: ScholarWorks Canada Lost River ENVELOPE(-56.673,-56.673,51.723,51.723)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Montana: ScholarWorks
op_collection_id ftunivmontana
language unknown
description This research is part of a larger project based on the theory of the existence of a pre-ice age, Amazon-scale river that had headwaters in the southern Colorado Plateau and flowed north through the western United States and Canada before discharging into the Labrador Sea. Stream-rounded fluvial deposits in Montana and Idaho provide evidence of sediment provenance in Nevada and Utah, as there are no confirmed bedrock sources for these sediments in Montana or Idaho. The Miocene river bed has been offset and tilted by dozens of extensional faults in the region. Some faults bound large mountain ranges including the Lost River, Lemhi, Beaverhead, Tendoy, Blacktail Deer, Ruby, Madison, and Big Belt Mountains. The reconstructed trend of the Miocene river bed provides a reference line against which to measure active faulting. We constructed five balanced cross-sections of the deformed subsurface along the Miocene river bed from north-central Montana to southeast Idaho across the faulted mountain ranges and restored the cross-sections to represent an un-deformed subsurface. This provided valuable insight into crustal deformation in these regions. Knowing the timing and extent of crustal deformation has many scientific and societal benefits. Western Montana and adjacent Idaho occupy the Inter-mountain Seismic Zone and have the potential for large earthquakes. Detailed cross-sections through this zone can provide information for development projects in faulted areas, and target potential aquifer locations where the thick river gravel has been down-faulted into the sub-surface. This research will be an important contribution to understanding the evolution of the tectonic landscape of Montana and Idaho.
format Text
author Johnson, Benjamin B, Mr.
Schuhmacher, Dain A.
Mason, Gerri K.
Rodriguez, Thomas R, Mr
Subatch, Jason J.
spellingShingle Johnson, Benjamin B, Mr.
Schuhmacher, Dain A.
Mason, Gerri K.
Rodriguez, Thomas R, Mr
Subatch, Jason J.
Balanced and Restored Cross-Sections Representing Post-Miocene Crustal Extension of Fluvial Deposits, North-Central Montana to Southeast Idaho
author_facet Johnson, Benjamin B, Mr.
Schuhmacher, Dain A.
Mason, Gerri K.
Rodriguez, Thomas R, Mr
Subatch, Jason J.
author_sort Johnson, Benjamin B, Mr.
title Balanced and Restored Cross-Sections Representing Post-Miocene Crustal Extension of Fluvial Deposits, North-Central Montana to Southeast Idaho
title_short Balanced and Restored Cross-Sections Representing Post-Miocene Crustal Extension of Fluvial Deposits, North-Central Montana to Southeast Idaho
title_full Balanced and Restored Cross-Sections Representing Post-Miocene Crustal Extension of Fluvial Deposits, North-Central Montana to Southeast Idaho
title_fullStr Balanced and Restored Cross-Sections Representing Post-Miocene Crustal Extension of Fluvial Deposits, North-Central Montana to Southeast Idaho
title_full_unstemmed Balanced and Restored Cross-Sections Representing Post-Miocene Crustal Extension of Fluvial Deposits, North-Central Montana to Southeast Idaho
title_sort balanced and restored cross-sections representing post-miocene crustal extension of fluvial deposits, north-central montana to southeast idaho
publisher ScholarWorks at University of Montana
publishDate 2014
url https://scholarworks.umt.edu/umcur/2014/poster_2/17
https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/umcur/article/1024/viewcontent/UMCUR_POSTER_FINAL_SUBMIT.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-56.673,-56.673,51.723,51.723)
geographic Canada
Lost River
geographic_facet Canada
Lost River
genre Labrador Sea
genre_facet Labrador Sea
op_source University of Montana Conference on Undergraduate Research (UMCUR)
op_relation https://scholarworks.umt.edu/umcur/2014/poster_2/17
https://scholarworks.umt.edu/context/umcur/article/1024/viewcontent/UMCUR_POSTER_FINAL_SUBMIT.pdf
_version_ 1771547132590817280