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Tectonically driven integration of the 4.8 Ma Colorado River USA tracked with detrital sanidine and fish genetics

July 1, 2026

The development of the continental-scale Colorado River system, western USA, from 8 to 4.8 Ma, is revealed using 60-40 Ma detrital sanidine tracer grains and fish phylogeny. Here we show that precursor paleoriver segments became integrated north to south as traced by 60-40 Ma sand grains that were derived from the north and sequentially appeared in the 25-8 Ma Browns Park Formation of Utah, 7-6 Ma upper Bidahochi Formation of Arizona, and 4.8 Ma Bouse Formation of the lower Colorado River and proto Gulf of California. This timing is mimicked by molecular clock estimates of divergence times among fish lineages. River integration was a response to headwater uplifts in the Yellowstone hotspot track and Rocky Mountains. 40Ar/39Ar ages refine the timing for mantle-drips that caused subsidence, then uplift, of depositional basins that influenced the integration pathway and tempo. The ~ 3-million-year timescale suggests that multiscale mantle-driven uplift, rather than lake spillover, was the primary driver for integration of the proto-Colorado River through Grand Canyon.

Publication Year 2026
Title Tectonically driven integration of the 4.8 Ma Colorado River USA tracked with detrital sanidine and fish genetics
DOI 10.1038/s41467-026-75006-8
Authors K. E. Karlstrom, M. Heizler, A. Aslan, Ian William Hillenbrand, S. Cather, T. F. Turner, M. Osborne, C. D. Henry, L. J. Crossey
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Nature Communications
Index ID 70277089
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Geosciences and Environmental Change Science Center
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