Abstract Three drivers of subsidence are recognized in the Western Interior Basin: Mesozoic–early Cenozoic flexure adjacent to the thin‐skinned, eastward propagating Sevier Orogeny, Late Cretaceous–Eocene flexure associated with thick‐skinned Laramide Uplifts and Late Cretaceous dynamic subsidence. This study combines outcrop lithofacies, palaeocurrent measurements, detrital zircon geochronology, biostratigraphy, stratigraphic correlations and isopach maps of Coniacian–Maastrichtian (89–66 Ma) units to identify these subsidence mechanisms impact on basin geometry and stratigraphic architecture in the northern Utah to southwestern Wyoming segment of the North American Cordillera. Detrital zircon maximum depositional ages and biostratigraphy support that the Maastrichtian Hams Fork Conglomerate was deposited above the Moxa unconformity in the wedgetop and foredeep depozones. The Moxa unconformity underlies the progradational Ericson Formation in the distal foredeep. The Hams Fork, however, is younger than the Ericson Formation, and instead equivalent to upper Almond Formation. Therefore, the hiatus associated with the Moxa unconformity continued for several million years longer in the fold belt and proximal basin than in the distal foredeep, with Ericson Formation‐equivalent strata onlapping the Moxa unconformity towards the west. Regional thickness patterns record and constrain the timing of the transition from Sevier to Laramide‐style tectonic regimes. From 88 to 83 Ma (upper Baxter Formation) a westward‐thickening stratigraphic wedge characterized the foredeep developed by lithospheric flexure by thrust‐belt loading. Nevertheless, the presence of >500 m of subsidence >200 km from the thrust front suggests a long‐wavelength subsidence mechanism consistent with dynamic subsidence. By 83 Ma (Blair Formation) the long‐wavelength depocentre shifted away from the thrust belt, with no evidence of a Sevier foredeep. This depocentre continued migrating eastward during the early‐mid Campanian (ca. 81–77 Ma). The late Campanian–Maastrichtian (ca. 74–66 Ma) is marked by narrow sedimentary wedges adjacent to the Wind River, Granite and Uinta Mountain uplifts and attributed to flexural loading by Laramide deformation.
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The Manantiales Basin, Southern Central Andes (∼32°S), Preserves a Record of Late Eocene–Miocene Episodic Growth of an East‐Vergent Orogenic Wedge
Abstract The Manantiales basin contains >4 km of nonmarine sedimentary strata that accumulated at 31.75–32.5°S during construction of the High Andes. We report field and analytical data from the underexplored northern portion of this basin. The basin contains upper Eocene–middle Miocene strata that accumulated in back‐bulge or distal foredeep through inner‐wedge‐top depozones of the Andean foreland basin as it migrated through this region. A revised accumulation history for the basin‐filling Río de los Patos and Chinches Formations supports a regional pattern of flexure in front of an east‐vergent orogenic wedge. The former formation consists of eolian and localized fluviolacustrine deposits which accumulated between ca. 38 Ma and ≤34 Ma during thrust belt development in Chile. A subsequent ≤12 Myr hiatus may reflect passage of the flexural forebulge or cessation of subsidence during orogenic quiescence. The overlying Chinches Formation records a transition from the foredeep to wedge‐top depozones. Foredeep deposits of east‐flowing, meandering streams were incised prior to ca. 18 Ma, after which deposits of axial rivers, playas, and perennial lakes ponded in a depression behind orogenic topography to the east. After ca. 15 Ma, alluvial‐fan deposits were syndepositionally deformed adjacent to growing thrust‐belt structures along the western basin margin. Although the basin record supports a westward step in the locus of deformation during Early–Middle Miocene time, it conflicts with models involving west‐vergence of the orogenic wedge. Rather, this pattern can be explained as out‐of‐sequence deformation alternating with wedge forward propagation, consistent with Coulomb wedge models incorporating syntectonic sedimentation.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2020935
- PAR ID:
- 10493505
- Publisher / Repository:
- DOI PREFIX: 10.1029
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Tectonics
- Volume:
- 43
- Issue:
- 3
- ISSN:
- 0278-7407
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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