VOLUME 39 NUMBER 1
Tectonic evolution of the Proterozoic
Coloradoprovince,Southern Rocky Mountains: A summary and appraisal
Andrew A. Farke
The 1937 American Museum of Natural History
(AMNH)Sinclair Oil Company joint expedition to the late Campanian and early
Maastrichtian Almond Formation of the Rock Springs Uplift, southern Wyoming,
recovered two ceratopsid cranial specimens. AMNH 3652, a partial skull lacking
the frill, is characterized by elongate, procurving postorbital horns and a deep
rostrum. Although the specimen cannot be identified to the generic or specific
level, it appears to be closely related to the clade of chasmosaurine
ceratopsids including Anchiceratops, Arrhinoceratops, Diceratops, Torosaurus,
and Triceratops, exclusive of Pentaceratops and Chasmosaurus. AMNH 3656, a frill
fragment, is characterized by large, triangular marginal processes and an
average thickness in excess of 40 mm. This specimen is similar to previously
reported frills from Anchiceratops. The ceratopsid specimens from the Almond
Formation are significant because they represent two early occurrences of
chasmosaurine ceratopsids as well as a unique occurrence in southern Wyoming.
KEY WORDS: Almond
Formation, Anchiceratops, Ceratopsia, Ceratopsidae, Chasmosaurinae, Late
Cretaceous, Mesaverde Group.
Tectonic and paleogeographic implications of late Laramide
geologic history in the northeastern corner of Wyomings Hanna Basin
Jason A. Lillegraven, Arthur W. Snoke, and Malcolm C.
McKenna
The Hanna Basin of
south-central Wyoming has been considered anomalous among other Laramide
depocenters of the Rocky Mountain region because of its combination of small
size and great thickness of synorogenic strata. Most prior interpretations of
the Hanna Basin have assumed a history of subsidence and sedimentary infilling
discrete from surrounding basins. In contrast, we summarize new geological and
paleontological information from the northeastern corner of the modern Hanna
Basin suggesting that, prior to late Paleocene time, the Hanna Basin and nearby
Carbon, Pass Creek, Laramie, and Shirley Basins were unified and depositionally
continuous with the much larger Green River Basin to the west. Only late in the
local expression of the Laramide orogeny (late Paleocene and early Eocene) did
this greater Green River Basin become subdivided through completion of
development of intrabasinal, basement-involved thrust faulting and associated
anticlines. We view the present Hanna Basin as only a small, structurally
defined remnant of an enormous, ponded basin that extended eastward during most
of Paleocene time from the WyomingIdahoUtah thrust belt to the newly uplifted
Laramie Mountains. That basin was bounded on the south by the Uinta Mountains
and combined Sierra MadreMedicine Bow Mountains and on the north by the Gros
Ventre Range, Wind River Mountains, and Sweetwater arch. When the original
configuration of the unified greater Green River Basin is taken into account and
combined with palinspastic removal of late Laramide faulting that defines its
various margins, this basin at least rivaled dimensions of the Powder River
Basin of Wyoming and Montana; the greater Green River Basin greatly exceeded the
volume of sedimentary accumulation within the Powder River Basin. Rates of
Paleogene basinal erosion associated with structural subdivision of eastern
components of the greater Green River Basin were prodigious.
Within context of a measured section, we describe and
interpret the lithologic nature, depositional settings, source areas, previous
geographic extent, and deformational history of the Hanna Formation as seen
today in the eastern Hanna Basin. Temporal control is linked to summaries of
included mammalian fossils, freshwater molluscs, leaf macrofloras, and
palynomorphic assemblages. Unexpectedly early occurrences of certain
palynomorphic assemblages suggest that paleoecological controls on distributions
of pollen-forming plants during Paleocene time were particularly important.
Deformation of strata in the eastern Hanna Basin chiefly
reflects a complex interaction between a major, south-directed, low-angle,
basement-involved thrust system and the thick and generally incompetent,
mudstone rich Hanna Formation. We argue that out-of-the-basin faults, the result
of spatial crowding in the basin, are kinematically linked to the
basement-involved thrust system through a triangle-zone geometry. This tri shear
style of deformation involved north-directed, out-of-the-basin, dcollement-type
thrusts and a synchronous south-directed, basement-involved, blind-thrust
system. Map relationships along the northern margin of the basin indicate that
many of the out-of-the-basin faults emplaced younger rocks onto older rocks,
seemingly an anomalous structural relationship for contractional deformation.
One explanation of these relationships
involves synchrony of the: (1) cutting down section of north-directed,
out-of-the-basin fault planes; with (2) upturning of basinal strata related to
south-directed, basement-involved faulting along the northern margin of the
Hanna Basin.
Finally, the inherited Precambrian structural grain of the Archean Wyoming province was instrumental in controlling the orientation of many
of the Laramide-age, basement-involved structural features. Tectonic heredity,
rather than changing stress orientations, probably accounts for the variation in
orientations of structural features associated with the northern and eastern
margins of the Hanna Basin.
KEY WORDS:
correlation, Cretaceous, Eocene, Green River Basin, Hanna Basin, Laramide
orogeny, paleobotany, Paleocene, paleoecology, Paleogene, paleogeography,
palynology, Rocky Mountains, stratigraphy, structural geology, tectonics,
vertebrate paleontology, Wyoming.