4.4 Article

THE SOUTHERN WYOMING LARAMIDE BASIN: IMPLICATIONS FOR LONG-TERM TECTONIC CONTROL ON UPLIFT AND SUBSIDENCE

Journal

JOURNAL OF SEDIMENTARY RESEARCH
Volume 93, Issue 6, Pages 350-369

Publisher

SEPM-SOC SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY
DOI: 10.2110/jsr.2022.077

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The evolution of tectonic setting in southern Wyoming during the Late Cretaceous and Paleocene led to the transformation of the region from a marine shelf setting to lacustrine basins. The depositional patterns were initially controlled by flexural tectonics, but later shifted to dynamic topography and Laramide-style deformation. Laramide movements exerted increasing control on regional depositional patterns, creating long-lived fluvial catchments and subsidence-driven basins.
An evolving tectonic setting during the Late Cretaceous and Paleocene drove the dramatic transformation of southern Wyoming from a broad marine shelf setting to a series of lacustrine basins. Early dominant control of depositional patterns by flexural tectonics gave way to control by dynamic topography and Laramide-style deformation. The southern Wyoming region demonstrates how progressive partitioning by Laramide movements exerted increasingly dominant control on regional depositional patterns. It did this by creating a long-lived, Laramide uplift-bounded fluvial catchment and basin largely controlled by Laramide-driven subsidence. The Rock Springs and Rawlins uplifts underpinned the basin and exerted their influence in the subsurface. Episodes of Laramide-driven subsidence produced a series of embayments, including the large Rusty-Allen Ridge embayment and the very large deepwater Lewis embayment. The degree of eustatic control in the region would have been greatest at short time scales in the low coastal- shallow-marine settings, causing shoreline oscillations. Several long transgressive episodes followed relatively punctuated progradational periods of coastal-plain construction when supply was generally high from the thrust belt and surrounding uplifts. Laramide activity in the Paleocene led to enclosure of the fluvial basin and the development of a series of smaller marine embayments that mark the end of influence in the region by open and coastal marine processes.

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