4.7 Article

The effect of drainage reorganization on paleoaltimetry studies: An example from the Paleogene Laramide foreland

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 275, Issue 3-4, Pages 258-268

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2008.08.009

Keywords

isotope ratios; lacustrine sediments; drainage patterns; paleoaltimetry; limnogeology; North American Cordillera

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [EAR-0609649]
  2. Stanford University

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Using multiple isotope systems, we examine the complex effects of drainage reorganization in the Laramide Foreland in the context of stable isotope paleoaltimetry. Strontium, oxygen and carbon isotopic data from lacustrine carbonates formed in the southwestern Uinta Basin, Utah between the Late Cretaceous and late Middle Eocene reveal a two stage expansion in the drainage basin of Lake Uinta beginning at similar to 53 Ma culminating in the Mahogany highstand at 48.6 Ma. A marked increase in Sr-87/Sr-86 ratios of samples from the Main Body of the Green River Formation is interpreted as the result of water overflowing the Greater Green River Basin in Wyoming and entering Lake Uinta from the east via the Piceance Creek Basin of northwestern Colorado. This large new source of water caused a rapid expansion of Lake Uinta and was accompanied by a significant and rapid increase in the O isotope record of carbonate samples by similar to 6 parts per thousand. The periodic overspilling of Lake Gosiute probably became continuous at similar to 49 Ma, when the lake captured low-delta O-18 water from the Challis and Absaroka Volcanic Fields to the north. However, evaporation in the Greater Green River and Piceance Creek Basins meant that the waters entering Lake Uinta were still enriched in O-18. By similar to 46 Ma, inflows from the Greater Green River Basin ceased, resulting in a lowstand of Lake Uinta and the deposition of bedded evaporites in the Saline Facies of the Green River Formation. We thus show that basin development and lake hydrology in the Laramide foreland were characterized by large-scale changes in Cordilleran drainage patterns, capable of confounding paleoaltimetry studies premised on too few isotopic systems, samples or localities. In the case of the North American Cordillera of the Paleogene, we further demonstrate the likelihood that (1) topographic evolution of distal source areas strongly influenced the isotopic records of intraforeland basins and (2) a pattern of drainage integration between the hinterland and foreland may correlate in space and time with the southward sweep of hinterland magniatism. (c) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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