Laramide structures and basement block faulting: Two examples from the Big Horn Mountains, Wyoming

Author(s):  
John C. Palmquist
1986 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 1-46
Author(s):  
Ole Valdemar Vejbæk

The Lower Cretaceous sequence of the Danish Central Trough has been studied by the use of seismic stratigraphic analysis. The sequence has been subdivided into 6 seismic stratigraphic units named LCA, LCB, LCC, LCD, LCE and LCF. The studied area includes the Feda Graben, the Gertrud Graben (new name), the Tail End Graben, the Arne-Elin Graben (new name) and the Salt Dome Province, whereas the Grensen Nose and the Outer Rough Basin are not included. These basins are separated by the Inge High, the Mads High, the Gert Ridge (new name), the Manda! High, the Heno Plateau (new name) and the Pollerne Ridge (new name). The fault controlled subsidence of the Lower Cretaceous basins is claimed to have been governed by left lateral transtensional wrenching. This wrenching gradually ceased and gave way to regional subsidence with intermittent events of inversion resulting from right lateral transpressive wrenching in the Late Cretaceous and Early Tertiary. The first weak inversion is shown to have occurred in the Late Hauterivian. Sedimentation was influenced by a general gradual relative rise in sea-level starting with a low in the Volgian - Early Ryazanian times coeval with the deposition of the Farsund Formation and culminating in the Late Cretaceous. At the beginning of the Early Cretaceous gravity flow became an important depositional mechanism and resulted in preferred deposition in topographical lows, which were generated by simple tensional block-faulting or by wrench-induced, rapid local subsidence. As tectonic activity decreased and the elastic source areas became more remote and worn down, depocentres became less pronounced, especially with the last unit of the Lower Cretaceous.


1949 ◽  
Vol 57 (2) ◽  
pp. 175-195 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert P. Sharp
Keyword(s):  

1974 ◽  
Vol 13 (69) ◽  
pp. 415-429
Author(s):  
Parker E. Calkin

The results of airborne radio-echo (R/E) depth sounding over Wilson Piedmont Glacier, Mackay, Ferrar and Taylor outlet glaciers, and over the ice sheet bordering the mountains, provide ice thicknesses and subglacial topography accurate to 20 m and to 1 km areally. The R/E records show that flours of the Debenham, Wright and Victoria Valleys occur beneath the Wilson Piedmont at elevations of –260 m, and up to 260 and 670 m, respectively. The 670 m “threshold” may have blocked easterly marine and glacial invasions experienced by lower valleys. Profiles along the outlet glaciers display large depressions, some below sea-level. These are associated with erosion by tributaries and with glacial erosion through thick dolerite sills. Elevated ridges thought to be sills submerged beneath the heads of these glaciers also limit nourishment from the adjacent part of the ice sheet. The subglacial west flank of the mountains is formed by a series of high steep-sided plateaux with gentle west-sloping surfaces. Block faulting, west-dipping dolerite and sandstone units, and glacial erosion must explain this topography.


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