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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

AAPG Bulletin

Abstract


Volume: 69 (1985)

Issue: 5. (May)

First Page: 854

Last Page: 854

Title: Geohistorical Previous HitAnalysisNext Hit of Paradox Previous HitBasinNext Hit: ABSTRACT

Author(s): Lawrence D. Lemke

Article Type: Meeting abstract

Abstract:

The Paradox Previous HitbasinNext Hit is an elongate sedimentary Previous HitbasinNext Hit, asymmetric in profile, extending across common corners of Utah, Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico. Subsidence of the Previous HitbasinNext Hit began in Desmoinesian time and was coincident with the development of the Ancestral Rocky Mountains. The Uncompahgre uplift formed the northeast boundary of the Previous HitbasinNext Hit during Pennsylvanian and Permian times.

Formation thicknesses and lithologies were obtained from lithologic and radioactivity logs from various parts of the Previous HitbasinNext Hit. The stratigraphic column at each well, restored through the Upper Cretaceous, was backstripped and decompacted to reconstruct its depositional history. Decompacted geohistory diagrams and residual (tectonic) subsidence curves were then generated for each well.

The Mobil 1 McCormick well, drilled in 1977, penetrates Pennsylvanian strata beneath reverse-faulted granitic basement; this indicates that the Previous HitbasinNext Hit was flexed down in response to Pennsylvanian and Permian thrust faulting along the flank of the Uncompahgre uplift. However, close correspondence of the residual subsidence curves to theoretical thermal subsidence curves indicates that the Previous HitbasinNext Hit formed by crustal extension. Consequently, development of the Previous HitbasinNext Hit may have involved crustal stretching (transtensional?) beneath the Previous HitbasinNext Hit floor, followed by thrusting (transpressional?) along the flank of the Uncompahgre uplift.

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