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Heating, cooling, and uplift during Tertiary time, northern Sangre de Cristo Range, Colorado (USA)

January 1, 1986

aleozoic sedimentary rocks in a wide area of the northern Sangre de Cristo Range show effects of heating during Tertiary time. Heating is tentatively interpreted as a response to burial during Laramide folding and thrusting and also to high heat flow during Rio Grande rifting.

The regional extent of heating is shown by the distribution of low-grade metamorphic minerals, altered conodonts, and reset fission-track ages throughout much of the study area. Alteration of conodonts to a conodont alteration index (CAI) of 4.0 suggests that temperatures reached ∼200 °C in the central part of the area. Temperatures may have reached 300 °C beneath Laramide thrusts on the west side of the range, where conodonts were altered to a CAI of 5.0, and where chloritoid and andalusite are found in sedimentary rocks of Pennsylvanian age. The lowest temperatures that were determined by conodont alteration (CAI = 1.0–2.0,

Publication Year 1986
Title Heating, cooling, and uplift during Tertiary time, northern Sangre de Cristo Range, Colorado (USA)
DOI 10.1130/0016-7606(1986)97<1133:HCAUDT>2.0.CO;2
Authors D. A. Lindsay, P.A.M. Andriessen, B. Wardlaw
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Geological Society of America Bulletin
Index ID 70014679
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
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