Rocky Mountain - 55th Annual Meeting (May 7-9, 2003)

Paper No. 8
Presentation Time: 3:35 PM

CATASTROPHIC SEDIMENTATION IN THE MID-MAASTRICHTIAN OF SOUTHERN COLORADO


TURNER, Peter1, CORNELIUS, Chris2 and CLARKE, Paul1, (1)Petroleum Geoscience Unit, School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, The University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham, B15 2TT, United Kingdom, (2)Evergreen Rscs Inc, 1401 17th Street, Suite 1200, Denver, 80202, p.turner@bham.ac.uk

The Raton Basin of SE Colorado represents one of a series of Rocky Mountain retro-arc foreland basins that were situated along the western margin of the Cretaceous Epeiric seaway. Famed for recording a thin (<1 cm) K-T bolide boundary layer, new sedimentological studies within the basin have revealed that major "catastrophic" events occurred lower in the stratigraphy during mid-Maastrichtian times.

The key horizon rests at the contact between the shallow marine Trinidad Sandstone and the non-marine coal-bearing Vermejo Formation. A number of unusual features in the basal Vermejo Fm including glass-clast conglomerates, soft-sediment bombs, mega-rippled bedforms, short-lived block faults, and a variety of huge mud-flake breccias associated with highly erosive basin-wide flood events, indicate a major depositional hiatus across the Trinidad-Vermejo boundary that is here interpreted as a regional erosional unconformity.

Conglomerates in the lowest part of the Vermejo Fm contain relatively fresh SiO2-rich (with minor Al2O3 and K2O) glass clasts, composed of well-sorted fragments of scattered angular sand grains and Fe-rich micro-spherules of uncertain origin. Collectively these phenomena may be related to a bolide impact or undocumented volcanogenic episode. The event resulted in deformation and catastrophic sedimentation including ‘tsunamis’ and major ‘alluvial’ flood events that operated independently from higher-order climatic, tectonic and sea level change.