paleomagnetism and rock magnetism of carbonate rocks from the helena salient, southwest montana
DESCRIPTION
PALEOMAGNETISM AND ROCK MAGNETISM OF CARBONATE ROCKS FROM THE HELENA SALIENT, SOUTHWEST MONTANA. Ben Baugh . Introduction. North American cordilleran fold and thrust belt Helena salient Wyoming salient Vertical-axis rotation: paleomagnetism - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
PALEOMAGNETISM AND ROCK MAGNETISM OF CARBONATE ROCKS FROM THE HELENA SALIENT, SOUTHWEST MONTANA
Ben Baugh
Introduction• North American
cordilleran fold and thrust belt• Helena salient • Wyoming salient
• Vertical-axis rotation: paleomagnetism
(Grubbs and Van der Voo, 1976; Eldredge and Van der Voo, 1988; Jolly and Sheriff, 1992)
• * Sampling Mississippian carbonates, this study aims to investigate curvature of the Helena salient
(Harlan et al., 2008)
(Weil and Sussman, 2004)
Geology of Western Montana
(Eldredge and Van der Voo, 1988)
(Harlan et al., 2008)
• Fold and thrust belt propagation • 72 -56 Ma (Hoffman et al.,
1976)
• Pre-folding diorite sills• 77 Ma (Harlan et al. , 2008)
• Montana transverse zone
• Lewis and Clark shear zone
• Boulder Batholith • 78-68 Ma (Tilling et al., 1968)
• Helena Embayment• Pre-cambrian reentrant (Harrison et al., 1974)
1.) Are carbonates of the Helena salient remagnetized?
2.) Quantify vertical-axis rotation, if any
Establish age of magnetization
Use reference direction to quantify vertical-axis rotation
10 µm
(Weil and Sussman, 2004)
Objectives
(McCabe and Elmore, 1989)
Field Area
Eldredge and Van der Voo (1988)
Sampling• Paleozoic carbonates
• Madison Group carbonates (20 sites)
• Mission Canyon Limestone
• Lodgepole Limestone
• Cambrian Meagher limestone
(1 site)
• Devonian Jefferson carbonates
(3 sites)
Mission Canyon (Mississippian)Lodgepole Ls
Meagher Ls(Cambrian)
9 sites – Madison Group
1 site – Meagher Ls
Mission Canyon (Mississippian)Lodgepole Ls
Jefferson Fm(Devonian)
Pilgrim Fm(Cambrian)
5 sites – Madison Group
3 sites – Jefferson Fm
Mission Canyon (Mississippian)Lodgepole Ls
6 sites – Madison Group
Methods:
• Thermal Demagnetization (°C): • 144 specimens• NRM, 100, 200, 275, 350,
400, 440, 480, 520
• Magnetic Hysteresis• Ms, Mrs, Hc and Hcr• Aids in Characterizing
magnetic grain size
• Magnetic Susceptibility• Degree of magnetization
induces by applied magnetic field
Directional data analysis:Fold Test• Determines age of
magnetization relative to folding• Pre-tilting• Post-tilting• Syn-tilting
• McElhinny (1964)• Incremental fold test• Applied to all folds
• Tauxe and Watson (1994)• Treats directions as
Eigen vectors• Applied to Turner
anticline
(Weil and Sussman, 2004)
Results:Demagnetization• Stable, but weak
magnetizations
• 16/23 sites resulted in enough samples to generate site means
• Devil’s Fence: 6/9
• Three Forks: 6/8
• Turner: 4/6
Devil’s Fence and Turner anticlines reveal two apparent components of magnetization:• Lower hemisphere component, steep inclinations• Upper hemisphere component, shallow inclination
Devil’s Fence
Results:
Fold Tests:Devils Fence anticline
• Two apparent components
• Lower hemisphere component passes the fold test at 90-100% untilting
• Pre-tilting
• Grand mean direction:
D = 35°, I = 72°, α95 = 8°
Fold Tests:Three Forks anticline
• One apparent magnetization component
• Two sites reversed • Sites 22 and 24
• Site 23 split into two components
• passes the fold test at 100% untilting
• Pre-tilting
• Grand mean direction: D = 37°, I = 70°, α95 = 23°
Fold Tests:Turner anticline
• Two apparent magnetization components
• Lower hemisphere component passes the fold test at 100% untilting
• Pre-tilting interpretation
• Grand mean direction: D = 224°, I = 69°, α95 = 29°
Age of Magnetization:• Fold tests: pre-deformational
• Upper limit 77 Ma (Harlan et al., 2008)
• Steep, lower hemisphere component• K-group: Late Cretaceous
remagnetization
• Shallow, upper hemisphere component• M-group: Mississippian primary
detrital magnetization
Expected directions:
• Calculated using paleopole location, and location of study area
• Angular distance:p = cos -1 [(sinp sins + cosp coss cos(Øp-Øs)]
• DeclinationDx = cos -1 (sinp - sins cosp / coss sinp)
• InclinationIx = tan-1(2cot p)
Geologic Period Paleopole Expected Dec.
Expected Inc.
ΔDx ΔIx
Late Cretaceous 72.3°N/194.8°E
335.8° 70.1° 6.3° 3.6°
Mississippian 29.9°N/130.1°E
310° 8.2° 4.7° 2°
Mississippian
Late Cretaceous
Paleopoles from McFadden and McElhinny (1995)
Vertical-axis rotations: K-group• Devil’s Fence:
• 59° ± 25 clockwise
• Three Forks:• 62° ± >60° clockwise
• Turner:• 111° ± >60° counter-
clockwise
K-group K-group
Vertical-axis rotations: M-group
• Restoration of K-group to Cretaceous expected direction
• 22 ± 18° - 59 ± 14° clockwise rotation
• Timing difficult to constrain
Combined with Eldredge and Van der Voo (1988) Results:
• Clockwise rotation along southern margin
• Counter-clockwise rotation along northern margin
• Clockwise rotation within the Elkhorn plate
• Wolf Creek, MT• Late Cretaceous Two
Medicine Formation(Jolly and Sheriff, 1992)
• Transverse Zone• Late Cretaceous Diorite
sills(Harlan et al., 2008)
• Sawtooth Range• Mississippian Madison
Group(O’Brien et al., 2007)
Camparison with previous studies outside the Helena salient
Hysteresis Results• Wide Hcr/Hc range, Narrow
Mrs/Ms range
• M-group and K-group Plot along SP+PSD, and SP+SD mixing lines
• Consistent with remagnetized limestones (Suk et al., 1993; Xu et al., 1998; Channell and McCabe, 1994)
Bulk Magnetic Susceptibility• Decreasing Trend
• West-to-east
• Remagnetization event affected rocks more intensely towards the foreland?
• M-group most negatively susceptible• Least amount of
ferromagnetic material
Conclusions
• Remagnetization
• Remagnetized prior to deformation Late Jurassic- Late Cretaceous
• Some areas retain primary Mississippian magnetizations
• No remagnetization trends observed
Conclusions
• Vertical-axis rotation
• Clockwise along southern margin
• Counter-clockwise along northern margin
• Clockwise rotation within the Elkhorn plate
• Primary component may reveal a pre-remagnetization rotation
• Rotation minimal beyond transverse zones
Acknowledgements• Advisor: Bernie Housen
• Committee: Liz Schermer and Chris Suzcek
• Russ Burmester
• Field assistant: Steve Shaw
• Fellow graduate students
• Funding:• GDL Foundation• Graduate School RSP grant• Geology Department
Questions?
Remagnetized carbonates in Canadian Rockies
(Enkin et al., 2000)
Enkin et al. (2000)• Cambrian-Jurassic carbonates• Cretaceous age chemical
remanent magnetization (CRM)
• Front range: normal polarity• Foothills: Reverse polarity
Proposed mechanism for such a trend:
~100 Km
Remagnetized sedimentary rocks in Appalachia
(Stamatakos et al., 1996)
Post-tilting
Syn-tilting
Pre-tilting
HINTERLAND
FORELAND
• Early Paleozoic sedimentary rocks
• Widespread Pennsylvanian-Permian remagnetization• Hinterland: Post-folding• Foreland: Pre-folding• Central belt: Syn-
folding
• Fluids migrated faster than fold and thrust belt propagation during a unique geochemical setting
Remagnetized carbonates in the Sawtooth Range• O’brien et al. (2007)
• Madison Formation• Castle Reef dolomite• Allan Mountain
limestone
• Late Jurassic – Early Tertiary remagnetization (CRM)
• Pre-tilting• Two folds syn-tilting
• Chemical and Petrographic analysis• Elevated 87Sr/86Sr values
• Externally derived fluids
• Hydrocarbon migration
• No remagnetization trends• All reverse polarity
• Vertical-axis rotation not evaluated
Methods:Magnetic Hysteresis
• Plotting Mrs/Ms vs Hcr/Hc helps characterize grain size of ferrimagnetic material
• Primary magnetizations• Single-domain + multi-
domain (SD-MD) mixing line
• Remagnetized carbonates• Single domain +
superparamagnetic (SD-SP) mixing line
(Dunlop, 2002)
Directional data analysis:Getting a site mean
Interpret ChRM
Direction on stereoplot
Multiple samples from site plotted
Generate site mean
• Grand-mean direction: Mean generated for a cluster of site-means
Fold test criteria:
• Devil’s Fence and Turner anticlines: α95 < 20°• Three Forks: α95 < 25°
• Minimum of four samples per site (n≥4)• Two sites (Sites 16 and 23) split into a group
of three and a group of two