Abstract

A paleomagnetic investigation of welded tuff units from the Late Cretaceous Livingston and Maudlow Formations was undertaken to refine the Late Cretaceous to Paleocene APWP for cratonic North America. After progressive AF and thermal demagnetization, the Maudlow Formation (46.1°N, 248.9°E) yields a paleomagnetic pole at 70°N, 208°E (11 sites, A95 = 9°, K = 22). Tectonic correction improves the directional grouping, and the change is statistically significant. Two normal polarity intervals bounding a single reversed polarity interval are present. We interpret the reversed interval to be Chron 33r, on the basis of: [1] stratigraphic correlation of the Maudlow Formation with the Campanian Sedan Formation located 40 km to the east, and [2] K‐Ar dates of 83 ± 2 Ma at the middle of the sampled section and 74.9 ± 1 Ma near the top of the sampled section.The Livingston Formation (45.5°N, 250.1°E) yields a high Hc magnetization with a negative fold test, suggesting a post‐folding secondary magnetization. The Livingston mean direction yields a paleomagnetic pole at 72°N, 218°E (10 sites, A95 = 4°, K = 107) and is clearly distinguishable from a co‐existing lower Hc component reflecting a recent viscous overprint. We interpret the high Hc magnetization as Late Cretaceous to Paleocene in age.Neither the Maudlow Formation pole nor the pole derived from the high Hc overprint in the Livingston Formation agree with previously published poles for either the Late Cretaceous or Tertiary, but they do lie on a simple continuation of the APWP between Late Cretaceous and Paleocene mean poles. Secondary magnetizations found in the Franciscan Complex of California also yield poles which lie on a proposed extension of the APWP. If the Franciscan secondary poles represent an overprint event associated with early Tertiary accretion, and if the Livingston secondary pole represents a deformational event related to Laramide uplift of the nearby Beartooth Range, then together these three poles suggest that the North American APWP may continue farther to the east and south to define a Cretaceous‐Tertiary cusp.

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