GSA Connects 2022 meeting in Denver, Colorado

Paper No. 244-2
Presentation Time: 9:00 AM-1:00 PM

LATE EOCENE-EARLY OLIGOCENE TRAVERTINE DEPOSITS AND THEIR CORRELATION WITH HIGH-ELEVATION TERTIARY STRATA, GRAVELLY RANGE-GREATER YELLOWSTONE REGION, SOUTHWEST MONTANA


HANNEMAN, Debra, Whitehall Geogroup, Inc., 107 Whitetail Road, Whitehall, MT 59759-9636, LOFGREN, Donald, Raymond M. Alf Museum of Paleontology, 1175 Base Line Road, Claremont, CA 91711 and WIDEMAN, Charles J., Whitehall GeoGroup, Inc., 107 Whitetail Road, Whitehall, MT 59759

Late Eocene-early Oligocene travertine deposits occur along the northern crest of the Gravelly Range, in the Greater Yellowstone region of southwestern Montana, at circa 2900 m in elevation. The travertine deposits exist in three main areas that trend in a northwesterly direction for approximately 2.5 km and are up to 52.5 m in stratigraphic thickness. Extensional faulting and reactivated thrust faults control the spatial distribution of the travertine deposits. Late Eocene-early Oligocene strata age defined by vertebrate assemblages and volcanic units are lateral stratigraphic equivalents to the travertine deposits. Five distinct facies, along with their main identifying features, are delineated within the travertine deposits. Vent facies include mounds comprised of inclined, crenulated concentric laminae and boytroidal structures; apron/channel facies contain streamer fabric and packed, fragmental textures; pool facies include bubble mats, wavy lamination with conical tufts, and foam texture; proximal slope facies have well-developed inclined terracetttes and microterracettes; and distal slope facies contain microterracettes, spherules, and encrusted plants. With the exception of the vent facies, plant fragments and leaf imprint assemblages of Eocene-Oligocene age are found throughout the travertines but are best preserved in the distal slope facies. A preliminary list of floral taxa include Metasequoia, Sequoia, Gingko, Quercus?, Fagopsis, Tilia?, Amelanchier/Rosa, Plafkeria?, and Cornus. The travertine deposits were previously mapped as Upper Cretaceous-Paleocene Beaverhead Formation but are herein reassigned to the southwestern Montana informal Cenozoic Sequence 2. These deposits are heretofore undocumented but now are recognized as the most complete Paleogene travertine depositional system in the Greater Yellowstone region.