{"title":"新墨西哥州西南部小哈切特山脉Laramide Skunk Ranch地层的晚白垩世U-Pb凝灰岩年龄","authors":"G. Jennings, T. Lawton","doi":"10.56577/sm-2012.165","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"New LA-ICP-MS U-Pb ages on zircon crystals from airfall tuff beds within the Skunk Ranch Formation, a Laramide synorogenic unit exposed in the Little Hatchet Mountains, southwestern New Mexico, indicate a chronostratigraphic age of 71-70 Ma. Ranging from 374 m thick in its southern exposures to 738 m in northern exposures near Playas Peak, the Skunk Ranch Formation is divided into three informal members including a lower conglomerate member, a middle member of lacustrine shale and basaltic-andesite flows, and an upper member of conglomerate and sandstone. Near Playas Peak, the Skunk Ranch Formation overlies a thick section of the Campanian Ringbone Formation, but south of the Mojado thrust fault, the lower member unconformably overlies Albian carbonate strata. The Mojado thrust cuts the lower member and terminates in a fault-tip anticline in the middle member, which thus provides a minimum age on fault movement. Three tuff beds from the middle member were dated and yielded stratigraphically consistent ages. The stratigraphically lowest sample yielded a weighted mean age of 71.4 ± 0.5 Ma (n=81; MSWD=0.89). The middle tuff bed has a weighted age of 70.6 ± 0.7 Ma (n=32; MSWD=0.39). The stratigraphically highest tuff bed yielded a weighted mean age of 70.4 ± 0.5 Ma (n=60; MSWD=1.04). The new ages indicate that the Skunk Ranch is Campanian-Maastrichtian in age, rather than Eocene as previously interpreted on the basis of ostracodes and that it is correlative with the Hidalgo Formation, a thick section of andesitic flows and flow breccias. The Skunk Ranch Formation was formerly interpreted to record the second phase of a two-stage history of Laramide deformation in southwestern New Mexico. In addition to significantly improving stratigraphic correlation of Laramide strata, the new radiometric ages indicate that Laramide deformation in the Little Hatchet Mountains likely was restricted to the latest Cretaceous.","PeriodicalId":240412,"journal":{"name":"Proceedings Volume: \"Evaluating How Continental Sedimentary Basins Fill: Development and Preservation of Sedimentary Successions\", New Mexico Geological Society, 2012 Annual Spring Meeting","volume":"17 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2012-04-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Late Cretaceous U-Pb tuff ages from the Laramide Skunk Ranch formation, Little Hatchet Mountains, southwestern New Mexico\",\"authors\":\"G. Jennings, T. Lawton\",\"doi\":\"10.56577/sm-2012.165\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"New LA-ICP-MS U-Pb ages on zircon crystals from airfall tuff beds within the Skunk Ranch Formation, a Laramide synorogenic unit exposed in the Little Hatchet Mountains, southwestern New Mexico, indicate a chronostratigraphic age of 71-70 Ma. Ranging from 374 m thick in its southern exposures to 738 m in northern exposures near Playas Peak, the Skunk Ranch Formation is divided into three informal members including a lower conglomerate member, a middle member of lacustrine shale and basaltic-andesite flows, and an upper member of conglomerate and sandstone. Near Playas Peak, the Skunk Ranch Formation overlies a thick section of the Campanian Ringbone Formation, but south of the Mojado thrust fault, the lower member unconformably overlies Albian carbonate strata. The Mojado thrust cuts the lower member and terminates in a fault-tip anticline in the middle member, which thus provides a minimum age on fault movement. Three tuff beds from the middle member were dated and yielded stratigraphically consistent ages. The stratigraphically lowest sample yielded a weighted mean age of 71.4 ± 0.5 Ma (n=81; MSWD=0.89). The middle tuff bed has a weighted age of 70.6 ± 0.7 Ma (n=32; MSWD=0.39). The stratigraphically highest tuff bed yielded a weighted mean age of 70.4 ± 0.5 Ma (n=60; MSWD=1.04). The new ages indicate that the Skunk Ranch is Campanian-Maastrichtian in age, rather than Eocene as previously interpreted on the basis of ostracodes and that it is correlative with the Hidalgo Formation, a thick section of andesitic flows and flow breccias. The Skunk Ranch Formation was formerly interpreted to record the second phase of a two-stage history of Laramide deformation in southwestern New Mexico. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
新墨西哥州西南部小哈切特山脉Laramide同生单元Skunk Ranch组空气落凝灰岩层锆石晶体LA-ICP-MS U-Pb年龄表明其年代地层年龄为71 ~ 70 Ma。在Playas峰附近,Skunk Ranch组的厚度从南部的374 m到北部的738 m不等,分为三个非正式段,包括下砾岩段、湖相页岩和玄武安山岩流的中部段和砾岩和砂岩的上部段。在Playas Peak附近,Skunk Ranch组覆盖了坎帕尼亚环骨组的厚段,但在Mojado逆冲断层以南,下段不整合覆盖了Albian碳酸盐岩地层。莫哈多逆冲切断了下部构造段,并终止于中部构造段的断尖背斜,从而提供了断层运动的最小年龄。对中段的3个凝灰岩层进行了定年,得到了地层一致的年龄。地层最低样品的加权平均年龄为71.4±0.5 Ma (n=81;MSWD = 0.89)。中凝灰岩层的加权年龄为70.6±0.7 Ma (n=32);MSWD = 0.39)。地层最高凝灰岩层的加权平均年龄为70.4±0.5 Ma (n=60;MSWD = 1.04)。新的时代表明,臭鼬牧场的时代是坎帕尼亚-马斯垂克时期,而不是以前根据介形虫解释的始新世,它与伊达尔戈组相关,这是一个由安山岩流和流角砾岩组成的厚剖面。臭鼬牧场地层以前被解释为新墨西哥州西南部Laramide变形两阶段历史的第二阶段。新的辐射年龄不仅显著提高了Laramide地层对比,而且表明Little Hatchet Mountains的Laramide变形可能仅限于晚白垩世。
Late Cretaceous U-Pb tuff ages from the Laramide Skunk Ranch formation, Little Hatchet Mountains, southwestern New Mexico
New LA-ICP-MS U-Pb ages on zircon crystals from airfall tuff beds within the Skunk Ranch Formation, a Laramide synorogenic unit exposed in the Little Hatchet Mountains, southwestern New Mexico, indicate a chronostratigraphic age of 71-70 Ma. Ranging from 374 m thick in its southern exposures to 738 m in northern exposures near Playas Peak, the Skunk Ranch Formation is divided into three informal members including a lower conglomerate member, a middle member of lacustrine shale and basaltic-andesite flows, and an upper member of conglomerate and sandstone. Near Playas Peak, the Skunk Ranch Formation overlies a thick section of the Campanian Ringbone Formation, but south of the Mojado thrust fault, the lower member unconformably overlies Albian carbonate strata. The Mojado thrust cuts the lower member and terminates in a fault-tip anticline in the middle member, which thus provides a minimum age on fault movement. Three tuff beds from the middle member were dated and yielded stratigraphically consistent ages. The stratigraphically lowest sample yielded a weighted mean age of 71.4 ± 0.5 Ma (n=81; MSWD=0.89). The middle tuff bed has a weighted age of 70.6 ± 0.7 Ma (n=32; MSWD=0.39). The stratigraphically highest tuff bed yielded a weighted mean age of 70.4 ± 0.5 Ma (n=60; MSWD=1.04). The new ages indicate that the Skunk Ranch is Campanian-Maastrichtian in age, rather than Eocene as previously interpreted on the basis of ostracodes and that it is correlative with the Hidalgo Formation, a thick section of andesitic flows and flow breccias. The Skunk Ranch Formation was formerly interpreted to record the second phase of a two-stage history of Laramide deformation in southwestern New Mexico. In addition to significantly improving stratigraphic correlation of Laramide strata, the new radiometric ages indicate that Laramide deformation in the Little Hatchet Mountains likely was restricted to the latest Cretaceous.