Abstract
AbstractLaramide deformation during the Late Cretaceous through early Eocene interrupted the east‐flowing drainage systems from the Sevier hinterland and segmented the Western Interior Foreland Basin in much of western North America into a series of intermontane basins and Precambrian basement‐cored uplifts. In Wyoming, the timing of Laramide deformation and its impacts on drainage patterns during the overlap in the Sevier and Laramide orogenies remain under debate. New detrital zircon U‐Pb geochronologic data from 11 outcrop samples (n = 3,085) in south‐central Wyoming suggest at least two provenance‐distribution phases, distinguished by a substantial increase in zircons of late Paleoproterozoic age (1800–1600 Ma) recorded at approximately 79 Ma. The most likely source of late Paleoproterozoic age zircons is Precambrian basement‐cored uplifts, specifically the Sierra Madre Mountains, signaling the possible middle Campanian initiation of Laramide uplift, earlier than previously recorded. When combined with complementary data sets from surrounding basins, the first provenance‐distribution phase is age discordant, with the earliest evidence of 1800–1600 Ma zircons in the Piceance Basin of Colorado (late Santonian to early Campanian). The second provenance phase shows repeating age distribution patterns that begin with significant contributions from 1800 to 1600 Ma zircon grains and end with much broader and evenly distributed population signatures, confirming previous interpretations of significant Laramide deformation during the Maastrichtian (approximately 70 Ma) as well as uplift and recycling of Upper Cretaceous formations at about 67 Ma.
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