Paleogeography of Uncompahgre Uplift during Early-Medial Pennsylvanian
Revealed by Progression of Siliciclastic Wedges in
the Paradox Basin, Colorado and Utah
Rasmussen, Donald L.1 (1)
Paradox Basin Data, Longmont, CO
Pennsylvanian Hermosa strata in the Uncompahgre Trough (UT) along the SW margin of the Uncompahgre Uplift (UU) are cyclic, with each cycle
containing mappable transgressive
organic-rich shales, high-stand carbonates, low-stand
evaporites, and wedges of arkosic
siliciclastics. Arkosic siliciclastics in the Morrowan
through Medial Desmoinesian cycles were from
exposures of Precambrian basement in the early stages of UU in southern Colorado and northern New Mexico. Evaporites
and carbonates within the same cycles in the deep UT abut against the thrusted SW margin of UU (late Penn. and Permian thrusting)
but are not at their depositional limits which were beyond the thrusted margin. The UU adjacent to the deep UT was not
positive when these evaporites and carbonates were
deposited and the interstratified siliciclastics
wedges had a distant source (carried to UT by rivers and turbidity currents).
These wedges slowly prograded to the NW during Medial
Pennsylvanian. During Late Desmoinesian through the
Permian Wolfcampian, multiple siliciclastic
wedges prograded out into the UT, with each
successive wedge overlapping the one in the previous cycle. These wedges are arkosic and mapping indicates their source was
unquestionably the nearby tectonically active UU. The UU reached its highest
relief and erosion during the Permian Leonardian as
seen by the very thick wedges of Cutler-Organ Rock strata in the UT.