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Thursday, August 26, 2021

The Snowy Range, 2 billion years in the making

Medicine Bow Mountains and the Snowy Range rise above the Laramie Plains.
In the early 1980s, author John McPhee was gathering information for a book, Rising from the Plains, about Wyoming geology. He crossed the state on Interstate 80 from east to west, in the company of one of the grand old men of Wyoming geology, the late John David Love. McPhee took notes while Love drove and expounded on the landscape.

Near Laramie, as they looked west at distant mountains, McPhee was struck by the illusion: "... the Medicine Bow Mountains and the Snowy Range stood high, sharp, and clear, each so unlike the other that they gave the impression of actually being two ranges ... the flat-crested Medicine Bows, dark with balsam [subalpine fir], spruce, and pine; and, in the far high background, the white and treeless Snowy Range."

In fact, the latter sits atop the former, and geologically they are one.

Ancient sediments

In 1868, just a few months after Laramie was established, Arnold Hague of Clarence King's Fortieth Parallel Survey became the first geologist to explore the Medicine Bows. In his 1877 report, Hague described a flat-crested mountain range with "elevated plateau country, nearly 10,000 feet above sea-level ... dotted over with numerous alpine lakes." From this high surface rose a sharp-edged ridge that "culminates in Medicine Peak, a grand, broad central mass." [The plateau country is now Libby Flats, the ridge the Snowy Range, and the high point Medicine Bow Peak.]

The Snowy Range on the horizon, above Libby Flats.

"... the amphitheatres, with mural faces 1,500 feet deep, cut out of pure white quartzite, are very striking," wrote Hague. The peak itself "is a mass of pure white quartzite, rising nearly 2,000 feet above the surrounding country ..." He assigned the quartzite to what was then called the "Archean series"—the oldest rocks on Earth, specific age unknown. At that time, it was the best a geologist could do.

Hague found layers of pebbles and other signs of bedding in the quartzite, convincing him it had started as deposited sediments. He also concluded that the beds, originally horizontal, had been steeply tilted. But if he had further thoughts about how the quartzite and ridge formed, he didn't share them.
Pebbles in quartzite, cited by Hague as evidence of sedimentary origins.

Two decades later, a geology graduate student from the University of Wisconsin, Charles Van Hise, crossed the Medicine Bow Mountains on horseback in just three days. During his brief visit, he examined the rocks at the crest, taking notes for his PhD dissertation about North America's Precambrian rocks (equivalent to "Archean series" used by Hague). Like Hague, he described the quartzite as ancient and sedimentary.

Neglected no longer

In 1917, a third geologist came to southeast Wyoming to study the Medicine Bow Mountains. "Dr. Eliot Blackwelder, head of the department of geology at the University of Illinois arrived in this city this morning ..." reported the Laramie Boomerang on July 24. He would "start on a geological expedition in the Medicine Bow mountains in a few days." Blackwelder was interested specifically in the ancient rocks at the crest.

Blackwelder found the Medicine Bows a wonderful place to work, as he explained in his report. "In spite of its ready accessibility, this interesting range has been strangely neglected by geologists until the last decade. ... no detailed work seems to have been attempted." He would fill that gap, spending six weeks in the range in 1917, and a month in 1925.

At the end of 1926, Blackwelder published his Precambrian geology of the Medicine Bow Mountains. He named the "great, massive quartzite" of the Snowy Range the Medicine Peak quartzite, describing it as "extraordinarily thick"—on the order of 5600 ft! He too concluded it consisted of metamorphosed sediments dating from Precambrian time (but still without a specific age). Unlike his predecessors, however, Blackwelder offered a probable scenario for its origins.
Cross-section through the Medicine Bow Mountains in the area of the Snowy Range. Note the thickness of the Medicine Peak quartzite! (labeled "D"). Blackwelder 1926.
 Medicine Peak quartzite above Mirror Lake. Added arrow points to a huge dike—magma injected into the quartzite. Blackwelder 1926.

Reading the rocks

The Medicine Peak quartzite started as quartz sand, became sandstone, and then was metamorphosed under intense pressure to its final form—very hard rock that sparkles in the sun. Yet it still provides clues about its ancient birth. Blackwelder often spotted ripple marks and cross-bedding (layers at angles), evidence that the sand had accumulated in shallow active water. He suggested it was deposited just offshore, where it would be shaped by waves, or streams flowing into the sea.
Cross-bedding preserved in Medicine Peak quartzite; block is about 1 m long.
And yet the quartzite was so thick—at least 5600 ft even after compaction and metamorphism! How could so much sand accumulate in shallow water? Blackwelder turned to a modern-day analogy. "The great thickness of pure quartzite represents sifted sand that might have been deposited and worked over on a marine shelf, like that around Cape Hatteras, on the Atlantic coast of the United States."

But if so, how did sand on a marine shelf become quartzite 11,000 ft above sea level, far from any ocean? In Blackwelder's day, there was no good answer for this kind of question. It would be almost 40 years before enlightenment arrived.

Earth's dancing plates

By the early 1960s, geologists had accumulated enough evidence to put forward the theory of plate tectonics, now widely accepted. The Earth's rigid outer shell, the lithosphere (crust and upper mantle), consists of giant "tectonic plates" that grow, break, stretch, compress, dive under, thrust over, and collide in a slow but powerful dance. In the process, landscapes are changed on a grand scale.
Earth's plates (source)—very different from 2 billion years ago.
It was the movement of tectonic plates that created the Snowy Range. Here's the basic plot: Along the Wyoming coast, a massive amount of sand accumulated offshore. A plate collision pushed up mountains, metamorphosing and tilting the sand(stone). These mountains were worn down, their remnants buried. Then another tectonic confrontation pushed up the Medicine Bow Mountains. Erosion exposed the ancient quartzite and shaped the Snowy Range.

The former world

The Medicine Peak quartzite started as sand 2.1 billion years ago. Back then, Wyoming was part of Superia, a smallish supercontinent. But Superia was coming apart, leaving Wyoming on the coast of a growing ocean. Sand and other sediments would accumulate just offshore for some 200+ million years.
Modified from Mitchell and others, 2021.
Then something changed, something huge! Exactly what may be lost to deep history, or maybe not yet discovered. In any case, the widening ocean disappeared.

Collision and a continental suture

In their studies of the quartzite, Hague, Van Hise, and Blackwelder all could see that the beds of sand, which were horizontal when deposited, were now far from it. "In general the sedimentary beds are nearly vertical or steeply inclined to the southeast," wrote Blackwelder. They had been tilted almost 90 degrees!

The cause was continental collision. About 1.78 billion years ago, a smallish tectonic plate called the Green Mountain Terrane bumped up against the Wyoming coast. This "collision" went on for 40 million years, producing among other things a continental suture called the Cheyenne Belt—a zone of highly deformed rocks.
Inferred location of the Cheyenne Belt, a continental suture (original source unknown).
Deformed rock of the Cheyenne Belt, Medicine Bow Mountains (field trip stop 1); ruler is 15 cm.
As is typical for such a collision, a mountain range was pushed up, tilting the sand-turned-to-quartzite on its side. But that mountain range is now mostly gone. Though they may seem permanent to us, mountains too have lifetimes. As soon as they rise, erosion goes to work wearing them down, sometimes burying them in their own debris.

The remnants of the ancient range would lie buried for hundreds of millions of years, while sediments accumulated to great thickness. The quartzite would be covered by tens of thousands of feet of limestone, sandstone, and shale by the time the next big change arrived.

West Coast happenings impact Wyoming

That change was uplift of the Medicine Bow Mountains. It happened during a great mountain building event called the Laramide Orogeny, which started 80 million years ago, lasted almost 40 million years, and created mountain ranges from Mexico to Canada—the Rockies. In contrast with the previous collision, the plate jostling this time was remote. Almost a thousand miles to the west, the oceanic Farallon plate was diving under the North American plate, compressing the continent and pushing up mountains far inland.
Rocky Mountains due to subduction far to the west (source). 
Of course, as soon as the Medicine Bow Mountains rose, erosion set in. Eventually enough of the sedimentary rock cover was removed to expose the ancient Precambrian core. Being super hard and durable, the Medicine Peak quartzite eroded much more slowly, and was left as a high-standing ridge.

As Eliot Blackwelder would write 40 or 50 million years later, "The Snowy Range owes its prominence and position to a great, massive quartzite formation."

Field trip—you too can read the rocks!
The Snowy Range at the crest of the Medicine Bow Mountains, just 50 miles west of Laramie.
This tour includes five stops—four at the crest and one en route. Start early to include a hike to the summit of Medicine Bow Peak.

Zero your odometer at the junction of Highways 130 and 230 in West Laramie, and drive west on 130. At about 19.5 miles, as you descend into the Centennial Valley, slow down to take in the view. Immediately ahead are the forested Medicine Bow Mountains. Seemingly behind and above is the Snowy Range. Even this close, the illusion persists.

1. At 36 miles, turn right and park along the Brooklyn Lake Road near Nash Fork Campground. To view a bit of the 1.78 billion year old continental suture, walk into the campground, stay left on the loop, and just past the fee station and site 27, walk left (west) 20 or 30 yards to dark rock above the highway. Look around your feet for fine laminations, with waves and tight chevrons created by continental collision. Then check the two huge white quartzite boulders (dropped here by glaciers) for cross-bedding from deposition offshore, and gray bands with white pebbles flattened during collision.

2. At 40 miles, visit Libby Flats observation point (with restrooms and a "castle"). Enjoy Arnold Hague's "elevated plateau country ... dotted over with numerous alpine lakes."

3. A quarter mile farther west on Hwy 130, turn left to Medicine Bow Peak Over Look, with helpful interpretive signs. On the Snowy Range diagram, find The Diamond with Mirror Lake below—location of Blackwelder's photo included here, and the next stop.

4. Continue west 1.3 mile to Mirror Lake Picnic Area. Near the entrance, compare your view with Blackwelder's photo. In looking at the spectacular face, remember ... it is beds of sand turned vertical! From the high point of the loop, examine the large dark dike (marked in photo)—magma injected into the quartzite while it was still underground.

5. Continue west a short distance to the first of two Lake Marie parking lots. At the east end, explore the field of white quartzite boulders. Bedding and cross-bedding are common. Search to find gray bands with flattened white pebbles, evidence of plate tectonics in action!

A short distance farther on the highway is the west Lake Marie parking lot and a trailhead for Medicine Bow Peak, 12,013 ft elevation. The round trip is 8 or 9 miles. A shorter trail leaves from Lewis Lake, but doesn't have as much wonderful scenery in my opinion. A loop can be done to include both (see maps online).
Cross-bedded quartzite en route to Medicine Bow Peak from west Lake Marie trailhead.
Summit of Medicine Bow Peak—a giant pile of quartzite boulders.

Sources

Blackwelder, E. 1926. Precambrian geology of the Medicine Bow Mountains. Bull. Geol. Soc. Am. 37:615–658.

Hague, A. 1877. Medicine Bow Range, in US Geological Exploration of the 40th Parallel, vol. ii: 94–111. Washington, DC: GPO.

Hausel, WD. 1993. Guide to the geology, mining districts, and ghost towns of the Medicine Bow Mountains and Snowy Range Scenic Byway. WSGS Public Information Circular 32. Free PDF.

Sullivan, WA, and Beane, RJ. 2013. A new view of an old suture zone: evidence for sinistral transpression in the Cheyenne belt. GSA Bull. 125:1319–1337.


This post is based on my recent contribution to the History column of the Laramie Boomerang, which features articles by volunteers eager to share our local history. We also hope to relieve the dismal monotony of pandemic news, and support our flagging local newspaper! Articles are archived at the Albany County Historical Society website.


2 comments:

  1. Nice to have some friends along with you. I admit to thinking they were separate. We did camp in the Medicine Bow/Snowy Range area back in about 1986. It was beautiful, although chilly. In addition to the scenery, I remember giving a lift to some ranchers whose vehicle broke down (back to their house). I also remember waking up to find our sneakers had been partially eaten by some chipmunks or mice. The laces had been eaten and some of the suede was chewed off. Great to read about some of the history and the geology of the area!

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    1. Nice memories, Beth! You were lucky to have been there then. Campgrounds are pretty crowded during the summer now. But Labor Day will be here soon, and after that, camping is great. But warm sleeping bag needed!

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