Sedimentary petrology and stratigraphy of the lodore formation (Upper Cambrian), Northeast Utah and Northwest Colorado

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Title Sedimentary petrology and stratigraphy of the lodore formation (Upper Cambrian), Northeast Utah and Northwest Colorado
Publication Type thesis
School or College College of Mines & Earth Sciences
Department Geology & Geophysics
Author Herr, Randy Gerard
Date 1979
Description The Lodore Formation, an Upper Cambrian transgressive sandstone, outcrops along the Uinta Mountain Uplift in northeast Utah and north-west Colorado. Sandstone in the Lodore Formation is multicyclic, moderately to well sorted, subrounded quartzarenite, subarkose and arkose. Orthoclase is the most abundant feldspar; sedimentary rock fragments the most common rock fragments. Matrix generally constitutes less than 12 percent of the rock, and rock fragments consitute less than 1 percent. Rounded ziron, tourmaline and rutile are the principal heavy minerals. Diagenesis has led primarily to silica cementation. Other minerals introduced during diagenesis include hematite, apatie and calcite, dolomite and gypsum cement. The Lodore Formation is dominated by sandstone, but siltstone, claystone, and, rarely, sandy glauconitic dolmite are present in the upper part of the formation in the Dinosaur National Monument area. The basal part of the formation is generally coarse-grained and feld-spathic. Sedimentary structures, grain size trends, occurrence of trace fossils and body fossils, and the overall paleogeographic setting show that the Lodore Formation was deposited in nearshore marine environments. Variations in these physical and biological structures allow the identification of the beach and tidal flat sub-environments of the nearshore marine setting of the Lodore Formation. Analysis of cross-stratification and petrographic examination indicate that the Lodor Formation was derived mainly from the Precambrian Uinta Mountain Group. The stratigraphy of the Lodore Formation is in need of revision. Information gathered in this study suggests that the formation is late Middle Cambrian to Late Cambrian in age.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Dissertation Name Master of Science
Language eng
Rights Management (c) Randy Gerard Herr
Format application/pdf
Format Medium Application/pdf
ARK ark:/87278/s6kq3t3f
Setname ir_etd
ID 1633934
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6kq3t3f
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