Timing, Provenance, And Paleoclimate Implications Of The Cenozoic Eolian Deposition In The Central Rocky Mountains, USA

This study applies detrital zircon U-Pb geochronology and sandstone petrography to constrain the timing and provenance of Cenozoic eolian sandstone in the central Rocky Mountains. Four samples, collected at the transition to eolian deposition along a west-east transect, have maximum depositional age...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rowley, Jillian
Other Authors: Fan, Majie
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Geology 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10106/24076
Description
Summary:This study applies detrital zircon U-Pb geochronology and sandstone petrography to constrain the timing and provenance of Cenozoic eolian sandstone in the central Rocky Mountains. Four samples, collected at the transition to eolian deposition along a west-east transect, have maximum depositional ages of 35.9±0.7 Ma, 35.4±2.0 Ma, 33±0.9 Ma, and 30±1.0 Ma, suggesting the transition initiated during the latest Eocene-earliest Oligocene and became younger eastward. A total of 766 zircon grains consist of a 17-44 Ma population, derived from the distal ignimbrite flare-up in western and southwestern North America, and a population older than 45 Ma, recycled from local Laramide uplifts. Sandstone petrography results indicate detritus from the distal ignimbrite flare-up and local Laramide uplifts. The transition to eolian deposition could represent regional drying caused by both global cooling due to initiation of Antarctic glaciation and the development of rain shadow in the central Rocky Mountains due to regional uplift. Fan, Majie