کد مقاله کد نشریه سال انتشار مقاله انگلیسی نسخه تمام متن
4688957 1636019 2016 30 صفحه PDF دانلود رایگان
عنوان انگلیسی مقاله ISI
Sedimentary record of seismic events in the Eocene Green River Formation and its implications for regional tectonics on lake evolution (Bridger Basin, Wyoming)
ترجمه فارسی عنوان
ضبط رسوبی وقایع لرزه ای در سازند رودخانه سبز ائوسن و پیامدهای آن برای زمین شناسی منطقه ای در تکامل دریاچه (حوضه بریدگر، وایومینگ)
موضوعات مرتبط
مهندسی و علوم پایه علوم زمین و سیارات فرآیندهای سطح زمین
چکیده انگلیسی


• The lacustrine Green River Formation (Wyoming) hosts a wide variety of seismites.
• Folds, load structures, microfaults, breccias, and dikes occur in profundal deposits.
• They indicate Eocene (~ 51.5 Ma) earthquakes sourced along the Uinta Thrust System.
• Earthquakes had minimum magnitude 6–7, intensity (MCS) ~ 9, and mean recurrence of ~ 8 k.y.
• Seismites also mark a shift from balanced-fill to underfilled stages in lake evolution.

Outcrops and cores from the top of the lacustrine Tipton Member and the base of the Wilkins Peak Member (~ 51.5 Ma) of the Eocene Green River Formation, Bridger Basin in southwestern Wyoming yield a wide variety of sedimentary deformation features many of which are laterally extensive for more than 50 km. They include various types of folds, load structures, pinch-and-swell structures, microfaults, breccias and sedimentary dikes. In most cases deformation is represented by hybrid brittle–ductile structures exhibiting lateral variation in deformation style. These occur in low-energy, profundal organic-rich carbonate mudstones (oil shales), trona beds, tuffs, and profundal to sublittoral silty carbonate deposited in paleolake Gosiute. The deformation is not specific to the depositional environment because sedimentary units stratigraphically higher with similar facies show no deformation.The studied interval lacks any evidence for possible trigger mechanisms intrinsic to the depositional environment, such as strong wave action, rapid sediment loading, evaporite dissolution and collapse, or desiccation, so ‘endogenic’ causes are ruled out. Thus, the deformation features are interpreted as seismites, and change in deformation style and inferred increase in intensity towards the south suggest that the earthquakes were sourced from the nearby Uinta Fault System. The 22 levels exhibiting seismites recognized in cores indicate earthquakes with minimum magnitudes between 6 and 7, minimum epicentral intensity (MCS) of ~ 9, and varying recurrence intervals in the seismic history of the Uinta Fault System, with a mean apparent recurrence period of ~ 8.1 k.y. using average sedimentation rates and dated tuffs; in detail, however, there are two noticeably active periods followed by relative quiescence. The stratigraphic position of these deformed intervals also marks the transition between two distinct stages in lake evolution, from the balanced-filled Tipton Member to the overlying, underfilled Wilkins Peak Member. Thus, these seismites are evidence for regional-scale changes in lacustrine sedimentation of Eocene Lake Gosiute in response to syndepositional tectonic activity. Analysis of synsedimentary deformation features is, therefore, a promising yet under-utilized tool to trace the tectonic evolution of lacustrine deposits of the Green River Formation and other tectonically active marine and non-marine basins.

ناشر
Database: Elsevier - ScienceDirect (ساینس دایرکت)
Journal: Sedimentary Geology - Volume 344, October 2016, Pages 175–204
نویسندگان
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