Lake basin closure and episodic inflow as recorded by radiogenic Sr isotopes: Eocene Green River Formation in the Piceance Creek Basin, Colorado

2020 ◽  
Vol 57 (4) ◽  
pp. 355-373
Author(s):  
Kuwanna Dyer-Pietras

Lacustrine basins are excellent archives of lake evolution, and deposits record the uplift and weathering histories of the surrounding terrain. The application of Sr isotopes has been tested in several lacustrine basins, both modern and ancient, based on the premise that lakes are well mixed, and shifting Sr isotopes may suggest changes in lake provenance. In the Eocene lacustrine Green River Formation in the Piceance Creek Basin of Colorado, Sr isotope analysis of carbonate mudstones indicates that radiogenic Sr in the center of the Piceance lake decreased during the evolution of the lake, from 52.8–48.4 Ma. Because deposition in the basin center occurred away from the influence of episodic alluvial inflow at the basin margin, Sr isotope evolution in the Piceance lake after basin closure is recorded in the John Savage #24-1 core deposits, not the Anvil Points deposits. Sr isotope analysis of carbonate mudstones at Anvil Points below 55 m shows fluctuating radiogenic Sr values that record episodic inflow from the White River Uplift. This inflow is responsible for the difference in radiogenic Sr trends recorded between the basin center and margin. Above 55 m, fluctuating Sr isotope values at Anvil Points record episodic inflow from the White River Uplift, without inflow of Paleozoic and Mesozoic carbonates. The boundary at 55 m records the hydrologic closure of the Uinta and Piceance lakes around 52 Ma, when lake level lowered beneath the basin sill and the lakes were no longer connected across the Douglas Creek Arch. A significant increase in radiogenic Sr across the 55-m-boundary records this transition from open to closed hydrology, reflecting a loss of dissolved Sr sourced from Paleozoic and Mesozoic carbonates.

1991 ◽  
Vol 38 ◽  
pp. 183-201
Author(s):  
Paul Martin Holm

The Kærven syenite complex was emplaced as part of the magmatic activity related to continental rifling in the Paleogene. Radiometric age determinations have been carried out on samples from selected parts of the complex, which consists of more !han 10 significant units. Five amphiboles and two alkali feldspar have been analysed by the 40Arl'9Ar method with stepwise heating, five amphiboles and one biotite K/Ar analyses are presented together with Rb/Sr isotope analysis of 6 amphiboles, 2 biotites, 3 alkali feldspars and 32 whole rocks. The results reveal that a Iate, probably 36 Ma, thermal event caused Ar-loss in the alkali feldspars and excess 40Ar-gain in variable amounts in the analysed minerals. Also the Sr isotopes were disturbed by the secondary heating. Crystallisation ages for parts of the Kærven complex can be established as 58 ± 1 Ma, while other units have younger ages of 56.1 ± 0.8 Ma and 50.4 ± 0.8 Ma. The age for the early Kærven rocks is significantly older than other recorded syenites in the Kangerdlugssuaq area and is comparable only to the estimated age of the initiation of basaltic volcanism along the East Greenland coast at 57 Ma. An Rb/Sr isochron for four nordmarkite whole rocks and a 40Ar/39 Ar age plateau of an amphibole from one nordmarkite date the part of the Kangerdlugssuaq alkaline intrusion adjacent to the Kærven complex as 54.6 ± 2.4 Ma. This is older than other parts of the Kangerdlugssuaq intrusion, and indicate that this intrusion was multiple and emplaced over several million years


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