Abstract

AbstractThe South Fork slide (SFS) is exposed over an area of 800 km2 in northwest Wyoming, and its evolution is connected in space and time to the adjacent and overlying 48.87 Ma Heart Mountain slide (HMS). The youngest rocks deformed as part of the SFS are the Eocene Willwood Formation sands and mudstones, which have a U/Pb detrital zircon youngest depositional age (TuffZirc calculation) of 51.80 +1.04/−1.08 Ma as well as a spectrum of older zircons that were eroded from the Sevier Highlands to the west and the Archean Beartooth uplift to the north (n = 379 U-Pb zircon ages). The SFS is overlain by allochthonous Paleozoic carbonate and Eocene volcanic rocks of the HMS. The SFS deformation involves shallowly plunging thin-skinned folds that trend northeast-southwest, where the slip surface could have been the top of the Jurassic Gypsum Springs Formation. Detailed mapping reveals the absence of any cleavage or joints and a plethora of minor structures unreported in any thin-skinned belt as well as the fac...

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