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40Ar/39Ar detrital sanidine (DS) dating of river terraces provides new insights into the evolution and bedrock incision history of the San Juan River, a major tributary of the Colorado River, USA, at the million-year time scale. We dated terrace flights from the San Juan−Colorado River confluence to the San Juan Rocky Mountains. We report >5700 40Ar/ 39Ar dates on single DS grains from axial river facies within several meters above the straths of 30 individual terraces; these yielded ∼2.5% young (<2 Ma) grains that constrain maximum depositional ages (MDAs) and minimum incision rates. The most common young grains were from known caldera eruptions: 0.63 Ma grains derived from the Yellowstone Lava Creek B eruption, and 1.23 Ma and 1.62 Ma grains derived from two Jemez Mountains eruptions in New Mexico. Agreement of a DS-derived MDA age with a refined cosmogenic burial age from Bluff, Utah, indicates that the DS MDA closely approximates the true depositional age in some cases. In a given reach, terraces with ca. 0.6 Ma grains are commonly about half as high above the river as those with ca. 1.2 Ma grains, suggesting that the formation of the terrace flights likely tracks near-steady bedrock incision over the past 1.2 Ma. Longitudinal profile analysis of the San Juan River system shows variation in area-normalized along-stream gradients: a steeper (ksn = 150) reach near the confluence with the Colorado River, a shallower gradient (ksn = 70) in the central Colorado Plateau, and steeper (ksn = 150) channels in the upper Animas River basin. These reaches all show steady bedrock incision, but rates vary by >100 m/Ma, with 247 m/Ma at the San Juan−Colorado River confluence, 120−164 m/Ma across the core of the Colorado Plateau, and 263 m/Ma in the upper Animas River area of the San Juan Mountains. The combined dataset suggests that the San Juan River system is actively adjusting to base-level fall at the Colorado River confluence and to the uplift of the San Juan Mountains headwaters relative to the core of the Colorado Plateau. These fluvial adjustments are attributed to ongoing mantle-driven differential epeirogenic uplift that is shaping the San Juan River system as well as rivers and landscapes elsewhere in the western United States.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available May 8, 2026
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The Cambrian Tonto Group of the Grand Canyon was used by Edwin McKee in 1945 to make an insightful visual representation of how sedimentary facies record transgression across a craton—a common conceptual framework still used in geologic education. Although the tenets of McKee’s facies diagram persist, the integration of new stratigraphy, depositional models, paleontology, biostratigraphy, and other data is refining the underlying dynamics of this cratonic transgression. Instead of McKee’s interpretation of one major transgression with only minor regressions, there are at least five stratigraphic sequences, of which the lower three are separated by disconformities. These hiatal surfaces likely represent erosion of previously deposited Cambrian sediments that were laid down on the tropical, pre-vegetated landscape. Rather than being fully marine in origin, these sequences were formed by a mosaic of depositional environments including braided coastal plain, eolian, marginal marine, and various shallow marine environments. McKee, not having the insights of sequence stratigraphy and plate tectonics, concluded that the preservation of these sediments were due to predepositional topography and subsidence of the “geosyncline.” Our modern interpretation is that accommodation space was a result of eustasy and differential subsidence on the continental margin. Our modified depositional model provides a more effective teaching tool for fundamentals and nuances of modern stratigraphic thinking, using the Tonto Group as a still-influential type location for understanding transgressive successions.more » « less
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The upper Tonian ChUMP (Chuar-Uinta Mountains-Pahrump) strata of the southwestern U.S.A. are hypothesized to be regional correlatives and to record a time of rift basin evolution commencing at ca. 770 Ma in western Laurentia (modern-day coordinates). We test this correlation using U-Pb chemical abrasion-isotope dilution-thermal ionization mass spectrometry (CA-ID-TIMS) on detrital zircon grains from basal units within these successions. ChUMP units yield CA-ID-TIMS maximum depositional ages (MDA) between 775 and 766 Ma: the Chuar Group of AZ has an MDA of 770.1 ± 0.5 Ma (n = 1) and an additional young zircon mode at 775.7 ± 0.3 Ma (n = 11); the Uinta Mountain Group of northern UT has an MDA of 766.3 ± 0.5 Ma (n = 5) and contains a second young mode at 775.1 ± 0.7 Ma (n = 3); and the basal Horse Thief Springs Formation of the middle Pahrump Group CA has an MDA of 775.4 ± 0.7 Ma (n = 3). The ca. 775 and 770 Ma grains are interpreted to be from zircon-bearing mafic sources related to the 770–778 Ma Gunbarrel Large Igneous Province of Yukon and NW U.S.A. The 766 Ma population was either derived from the Mt Rogers complex of eastern Laurentia or could have come from conjugate margins that were in the process of rifting away, such as Tasmania. The CA-ID-TIMS dates on the Chuar Group in Grand Canyon anchor a Bayesian age model for evaluating late Tonian Earth systems. Faster sediment accumulation rates (80 + 150/-44 m/My) in the lower Chuar Group are consistent with the inception of an extensional basin related to Rodinia breakup; slower rates in the upper Chuar Group (25 + 12/-5 m/My) record are associated with relatively deeper water sedimentation and concomitant organic carbon burial during marine transgression. The model also constrains the timing of several biological events recorded in the Chuar Group, including eukaryovorous predation (>767 Ma), the first appearance of vase-shaped microfossils (∼741 Ma), and the ranges of Cerebrosphaera globosa (=C. buickii; 800–743 Ma) and Lanulatisphaera laufeldii. (766–740 Ma), both proposed as possible marine index fossils for late Tonian time. Finally, the model can also be used to search for stratigraphic evidence of a purported glaciation at ca. 751 Ma.more » « less
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Abstract We report exceptionally negative δ238U values for spring water (−2.5‰ to −0.8‰) and travertine calcite (−3.2‰ to −1.1‰) from an area where the Jemez lineament intersects the western margins of the Rio Grande rift, west-central New Mexico (southwestern United States). The highest anomalies come from the southern margins of the Valles Caldera and are related to upwelling CO2-charged spring water forming travertine mounds along joints and faults. The anomaly likely occurs due to CO2 lixiviation of uranium in a deep-seated reduced environment where 235U is preferentially leached along a long flow path through Precambrian granitic basement, resulting in spring water with exceptionally low δ238U values inherited by the calcite that precipitated near or at the surface at relatively low temperatures, i.e., ~40 °C (modern temperatures). The lowest δ238U values are preserved in settings where upwelling waters are least diluted by oxidized aquifer groundwaters. Given these low δ238U values in travertine are associated with and possibly indicators of upwelling CO2 related to tectonic and magmatic activity, studies such as ours may be used to identify this association far back in time.more » « less
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The Cenozoic Colorado Plateau physiographic province overlies multiple Precambrian provinces. Its ∼2-km elevation rim surrounds an ∼1.6-km elevation core that is underlain by thicker crust and lithospheric mantle, with a sharp structural transition ∼100 km concentrically inboard of the physiographic boundary on all but its northeastern margin. The region was uplifted in three episodes: ∼70–50 Ma uplift above sea level driven by flat-slab subduction; ∼38–23 Ma uplift associated with voluminous regional magmatism and slab removal, and less than 20 Ma uplift associated with inboard propagation of basaltic magmatism that tracked convective erosion of the lithospheric core. Neogene uplift helped integrate the Colorado River from the Rockies at 11 Ma to the Gulf of California by ∼5 Ma. The sharp rim-to-core transition defined by geological and geophysical data sets suggests a young transient plateau that is uplifting as it shrinks to merge with surrounding regions of postorogenic extension. ▪ The Colorado Plateau's iconic landscapes were shaped during its 70-million-year, still-enigmatic, tectonic evolution characterized by uplift and erosion. ▪ Uplift of the Colorado Plateau from sea level took place in three episodes, the youngest of which has been ongoing for the past 20 million years. ▪ Tectonism across the Colorado Plateau's nearest plate margin (the base of the plate!) is driving uplift and volcanism and enhancing its rugged landscapes. ▪ The bowl-shaped Colorado Plateau province is defined by ongoing uplift and an inboard sweep of magmatism around its margins. ▪ The keel of the Colorado Plateau is being thinned as the North American plate moves southwest through the underlying asthenosphere.more » « less
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