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Belt/Purcell Supergroup Oldest Rocks resting on NW Basement Rock
Glacier National Park
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Extent of the Belt/Purcell Rocks
A-4 Extent of the Belt/Purcell Rocks (from Burchfiel, Cowan, and Davis, 1992)
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A-5 Belt-Age Rocks (from Winston, 1971)
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A-5 Belt Thickness East (Montana) West (Idaho) 15-20 km
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Rock Types Shales Red Green Sandstones Limestones
Diabase Intrusions (Type of mafic igneous rock between a basalt & gabbro) Belt Supergroup - Glacier National Park, Montana (Linda Kah).
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Belt Structures - Shales/Sandstone
Laminations Mudcracks Ripples Raindrop Impressions Salt Crystal Impressions
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Belt Structures - Limestones
Stomatolites
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Shallow Marine - Intertidal Zone
Modern Stromatolites Shallow Marine - Intertidal Zone
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Sediment Source: East & West
(from Burchfiel, Cowan, and Davis, 1992)
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Age of the Belt Basalt on top = 750 to 830 Myrs Age: Between about
Supergroup Belt Intrusiuons: ca. 1,200 Myrs Mostly between 1,500 & 1,200 Myrs ? Youngest Basement Rock - 1,576±13 Myrs
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Interpretations Red Shale Green Shale Sandstone Limestone Stomatolites
Laminations Mudcracks Ripples Salt Crystals Western Source Diabase Intrusions Quiet: Land/shallow ocean Quiet: Deeper ocean Beach/river Shallow tropical ocean Quiet water / no animals Arid land surface Intertidal zone/beach Salty Water Land to the west Hot spot / Divergent zone
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Interpretations - Big Picture
Marine Embayment Salty Lake Inland Sea caused by Rifting
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Continental Rift
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Modern Inland Seas Black Sea Caspian Sea
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Did the Belt Rifted Apart?
East (Montana) West Belt Supergroup Where did it go? Fault Bounded
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Rodinia “Motherland” The World about 800 Myrs A-6 Montana (Belt)
New York Rodinia “Motherland”
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A-7
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Rodinia Rifts (750 Myrs) Rifts to form the (pre-Pacific) Panthalassa
Ocean Montana Rifts to form the (pre-Atlantic) Iapetus Ocean New York Rodinia Rifts (750 Myrs)
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Rifting of Rodinia
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Windermere Supergroup
As Rift Spread Apart Seiments Accumulate on the Margin of North America Windermere Supergroup ( Myrs)
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Extent of the Windermere Rocks
A-4 Extent of the Windermere Rocks (from Burchfiel, Cowan, and Davis, 1992)
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Windermere-Aged (750-550 Myrs) Rocks
(from Winston, 1971)
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Windermere: Toby Formation
Tillite Late Proterozoic Ice Age
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Major “Ice Ages” in Earth History
5 Major “Ice Ages” in Earth History 4 3 2 1
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Glacial Evidence for late Proterozoic Ice Age
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Snowball Earth?
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Post-Rifting West Coast Became a Passive Margin 750 to 200 Myrs Ago
Continental Shelf Sediments Ocean North America Direction of Plate Motion
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A-6 Belt Supergroup Windermere Supergroup Continental Shelf Deposits
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