PRESERVED SEDIMENTARY STRUCTURES IN THE PROTEROZOIC COAL CREEK QUARTZITE AS INDICATORS OF TECTONIC BASIN DEVELOPMENT, CENTRAL FRONT RANGE, COLORADO: A MULTI-DISCIPLINARY APPROACH
The Coal Creek Quartzite is a metamorphosed unit of sandstone with intercalated conglomerate and shale layers. A multi-disciplinary approach combines a team of a metamorphic petrologist and a sedimentologist/stratigrapher in order to better to examine and interpret this important unit. Numerous primary sedimentary structures are preserved in spite of metamorphic overprint, such as cross-bedding, graded bedding, channels, scour surfaces, and imbricated pebbles. Initial analysis suggests interpretation of protolith as braided stream, channel, and possible debris flow deposits. Deposition appears to have occurred in an asymmetric basin. This interpretation changes our view from an idealized to a more realistic model of tectonic basin development in the central Front Range. This may result in the identification of tectonic boundaries in the Colorado Province.
The early Proterozoic Tarkwaian Group of West Africa has many similarities to the Colorado central Front Range. Similar metasediments in West Africa occur in asymmetric basins and are interpreted as half-grabens formed in a back-arc basin extensional regime. Multi-disciplinary and comparative studies will prove important to the understanding of these and other Precambrian terranes.