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Miller, James F., Kevin R. Evans, and Benjamin F. Dattilo, 2012, The great American carbonate bank in the miogeocline of western central Utah: Tectonic influences on sedimentation, in J. R. Derby, R. D. Fritz, S. A. Longacre, W. A. Morgan, and C. A. Sternbach, eds., The great American carbonate bank: The geology and economic resources of the Cambrian–Ordovician Sauk megasequence of Laurentia: AAPG Memoir 98, p. 769854.

DOI:10.1306/13331516M983498

Copyright copy2012 by The American Association of Petroleum Geologists.

The Great American Carbonate Bank in the Miogeocline of Western Central Utah: Tectonic Influences on Sedimentation

James F. Miller,1 Kevin R. Evans,2 Benjamin F. Dattilo3

1Department of Geography, Geology and Planning, Missouri State University, Springfield, Missouri, U.S.A.
2Department of Geography, Geology and Planning, Missouri State University, Springfield, Missouri, U.S.A.
3Department of Geology, Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne, Fort Wayne, Indiana, U.S.A.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank many colleagues who taught us about the Cambrian and Ordovician of western Utah, especially Harry Cook, Lehi Hintze, Keith Rigby, Sr., Richard Robison, Albert Rowell, and Michael Taylor. Raymond Ethington identified conodonts from the Watson Ranch Quartzite, Crystal Peak Dolomite, and Ely Springs Dolomite. John Cutler served as a volunteer field assistant for several years, including during the 2008 and 2009 trips to Utah to take most of the photographs that illustrate this chapter. His interest in the Ordovician dates back to 1959, when he was Marshall Kay's field assistant in the Toquima Range, Nevada. Miller acknowledges financial support from National Science Foundation grants EAR 8108621, EAR 8407281, and EAR 8804352, as well as several faculty research grants from Missouri State University.

ABSTRACT

Cambrian and Ordovician strata in Millard and Juab counties, western central Utah, are a thick (17,500 ft [5334 m]) succession that was deposited on a tropical miogeoclinal platform that experienced rapid thermal subsidence after a Neoproterozoic sea-floor spreading ridge formed along the western margin of Laurentia. In this area, which includes the Cricket Mountains, Drum Mountains, Fish Springs Range, House Range, Confusion Range, and Wah Wah Mountains, the Cambrian to Middle Ordovician Sauk megasequence is approximately 15,875 ft (sim4839 m) thick, and the Upper Ordovician part of the Tippecanoe megasequence is approximately 1525 ft thick (sim465 m). Basal deposits of the Sauk megasequence are the transgressive Lower Cambrian Prospect Mountain Quartzite, and the top of the Sauk megasequence is the upper Whiterockian Watson Ranch Quartzite. Strata between these sandstones are mostly limestone with several shaly intervals. The Sauk megasequence is divided into four parts, Sauk I to IV, in this area, and these parts have been divided into smaller sequences. The Ordovician part of the Tippecanoe megasequence is mostly dolomite and quartzite.

Major influences on the depositional history of these strata include rapid generation of accommodation space caused by thermal subsidence following continental rifting, in-situ generation of tropical carbonates that generally kept pace with accommodation, eustatic fluctuations, influx of siliciclastics during sea level lowstands, and vertical tectonic adjustments of regional tectonic elements inherited from Neoproterozoic rifting: the Wah Wah arch, House Range embayment, Tooele arch, and Ibex Basin.

The resulting strata comprise one of the best known Middle Cambrian–Middle Ordovician stratigraphic successions in North America and include the reference sections of the Upper Cambrian Millardan Series and the Cambrian–Ordovician Ibexian Series. Stratigraphers established a Global boundary Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP) for the base of the Middle Cambrian Drumian Stage in the Drum Mountains and proposed another GSSP for the base of the uppermost Cambrian stage in the Wah Wah Mountains. Middle Cambrian–Middle Ordovician strata are very fossiliferous, and some intervals have incredibly abundant fossils, such as the numerous complete specimens of the Middle Cambrian trilobite Elrathia kingii in the central House Range. Trilobites, conodonts, brachiopods, and other fossil groups have been used for biozonation and correlation, and these strata comprise a North American standard for uppermost Cambrian–Middle Ordovician trilobite and conodont zonations. Upper Ordovician dolomites and quartzites are less fossiliferous.

These Cambrian and Ordovician strata are the lower half of a Lower Cambrian–Lower Triassic succession that is approximately 34,000 ft (10,300 m) thick and was thrust onto the Jurassic Navajo Sandstone in the southern Wah Wah Mountains during the Sevier orogeny. These strata are exposed in block-faulted mountain ranges resulting from basin and range extension during the late Tertiary.

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