Paper No. 0
Presentation Time: 3:30 PM
PALEOMAGNETISM OF THE LATEST CRETACEOUS WHITEHORN GRANODIORITE AND HOST STRATA, SOUTHERN MOSQUITO RANGE, COLORADO
Exposed at the southern end of the Mosquito Range, north of Salida, Colorado, the Whitehorn Granodiorite and related dikes intrude predominantly Pennsylvanian sedimentary rocks and, locally, Precambrian rocks. The pluton is about 8 km in east-west dimension and about 25 km in north-south dimension. The pluton has yielded K-Ar hornblende and biotite dates ranging from 73 to 66 Myr; emplacement is interpreted to have postdated the onset of Laramide style deformation in the area. Geobarometry on contact zone mineral assemblages yields calculated pressures from about 3.4 to 4.1 Kb and it is plausible that the area has experienced some 10 km of exhumation since the latest Cretaceous. We have collected a total of 32 sites in the Whitehorn Granodiorite and related rocks (23 sites in granodiorite, 3 sites in dikes, 6 sites in Pennsylvanian strata in contact with the pluton). For granodiorite sites yielding essentially a single component of magnetization in either AF or thermal demagnetization, NRM intensities range from about 1.2 to about 0.6 A/m. Magnetizations characteristic of most sites in the granodiorite, related dikes, and remagnetized host rocks are exclusively of normal polarity and are of northwest declination and moderate positive inclination (the grand mean of 16 sites demagnetized, including two sites in remagnetized host rocks, is Declination=334.3o,Inclination=57.5o, a95=4.2o, k=78.8). This insitu magnetization differs from an expected latest Cretaceous (about 70 to 66 My) expected direction (about 340/62 to 347/61). The discordance is tentatively interpreted as a slight (less than 15o) down to the east tilting of the Whitehorn Granodiorite and host rocks and is consistent with the east-dipping orientation of the fission track partial annealing surface(documented by Kelley and Chapin)on the eastern limb of the broad Sawatch anticline that developed during latest Cretaceoius to early Teriary deformation in central Colorado.