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Saturday, September 27, 2014

Shear Beauty along the Highway

Crenulated beds (chevron folds) with alpine phlox.
Wyoming Highway 130 crosses the Medicine Bow Mountains west of Laramie.  North of the highway immediately beyond the turnoff to Brooklyn Lake are low dull-brown slopes that I’ve ignored for 30+ years.  Foolish me.
On the "dull" brown slopes are glacially-polished slate outcrops with fine multi-colored folds. The outcrops aren't extensive, but the patterns and colors are so intriguing that I stayed almost an hour looking at rocks and plants.
This is the French slate, exposed in the Mullen Creek - Nash Fork shear zone -- part of the Cheyenne Belt, a dramatic geologic structure that crosses southern Wyoming.  Rocks south of the Belt are Proterozoic (really old, 1.72 to 1.75 billion years); those to the north are Archean (really really old, two billion years or more).  Roughly 1.7 billion years ago, oceanic arc terranes collided with Wyoming along what was then the southern coast of North America, creating “the best agreed upon suture zone in the Precambrian of the western United States” (Whitmeyer and Karlstrom 2011).  The French slate was caught up in the mayhem and beautifully folded.
The green Yavapai province, a collection of oceanic arc terranes, was sutured to the south coast of North America along the Cheyenne Belt in what is now southern Wyoming (click on image to view; arrow added).  Modified from Whitmeyer and Karlstrom (2011).
The deformed slate seemed quite durable.  I couldn’t find any small fragments to take home, and cracks and soil pockets for plants were few.
Requisite ruler for scale (6 in, 12 cm).
Fernleaf daisy in a narrow shallow fracture.
Mountain candytuff in a small soil pocket.
Lichen grow on the rock surface, over fine-scale folds.
Grouse whortleberry and common juniper (lower right) surround a small outcrop of deformed slate.

The French slate is thought to have started as fine sediments deposited in deep ocean waters off the southern coast of North America (Lanthier 1979).  Then along came the colliding oceanic arc terranes, and the ocean was squeezed out of existence.  We say "collision" but it was hardly a single dramatic event.  Whitmeyer and Karlstrom estimate it took place 1.76 to 1.72 billion years ago -- a period of 40 million years.

It's so hard to grasp geologic time at these scales!  The quartzite boulder below is much easier.  It's an erratic left by a glacier 12-16 thousand years ago -- just recently.  The glacier also polished the folded French slate, a nice touch.
Glacial erratic made of Medicine Peak quartzite; it was carried down from the high Snowy Range to the west.

How to get there
From Wyoming Highway 130 roughly 7.5 miles northwest of Centennial, turn north (right) on the road to Brooklyn Lake.  Almost immediately turn left into the Nash Fork Campground if it’s open (recently it hasn't been) or park nearby.  From the bulletin board/restroom area near the entrance, walk 20 to 30 yards west to the brown outcrops just above the highway.  The folds are obvious.
From Google Maps.  Arrow shows location of outcrops.


Sources

Hausel, WD.  1993.  Guide to the geology, mining districts and ghost towns of the Medicine Bow Mountains and Snowy Range Scenic Byway.  Geol Surv WY Public Info Circ 32.

Lanthier, R.  1979.  Stratigraphy and structure of the lower part of the Precambrian Libby Creek Group, central Medicine Bow Mountains, Wyoming.  Contrib to Geology, Univ Wyoming 17:135-147.

Whitmeyer, SJ and Karlstrom, KE.  2011.  Tectonic model for the Proterozoic growth of North America.  Geosphere 3:220-259.

2 comments:

  1. wow, those are so beautiful! must've been fun to photograph! :-)

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    1. thanks elena. This was my first post to "go viral" (heh heh, relatively speaking), via Twitter. Shows what geeks geologists are, especially when it comes to folds!

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