Publication Date
1986
Document Type
Dissertation/Thesis
First Advisor
Weiss, Malcolm P. (Malcolm Pickett), 1921-
Degree Name
M.S. (Master of Science)
Legacy Department
Department of Geology
LCSH
Lithofacies--Utah; Paleogeography--Utah; Geology--Utah
Abstract
The Eocene fluviatile Crazy Hollow Formation of central Utah is characterized regionally by its lithic variety, and is differentiated stratigraphically from its enclosing lacustrine rock units. The Crazy Hollow is mineralogically and stratigraphically equivalent to the informal "Tawny beds" found along the western Gunnison Plateau, and represents the full fluvial sequence found above the Green River and below various pyroclastic formations. The 3 my (near Salina) to 11 my (in western Gunnison Plateau) interval of deposition is determined by dates from the enclosing formations. The very rapid vertical and horizontal lithic changes in the unit distinguish it from other fluvial sequences in central Utah. It is like them in having feldspathic sandstone, but it is conspicuously different in having salt-and-pepper sandstone (of quartz and both black and gray chert). The Crazy Hollow extends northwest into Juab Valley with patchy exposures on the Gunnison Plateau, northeast to the southern Cedar Hills, southeast along the western Wasatch Plateau to northern Fish Lake Plateau, and southwest to the eastern Valley Mountains. A section near Aurora is suggested as a sup- plementary reference section because of its lithic variety, completeness and accessibility. The distinction between the Green River and Crazy Hollow is not sharp and clean, but can be defined by a color change from pale gray and green to red, an increase in clastic material or, locally, evidence of an erosional surface. The contact is locally disconformable, but in many instances the boundary is gradational—even with interfingering units. The depositional environment of the Crazy Hollow changed regionally from mixed-load streams in the southeast to alluvial deposition in the northwest, close to the margin of the Lake Uinta basin. The source of most of the Crazy Hollow sediment was the Laramide uplifts to the east—notably the Uncompahgre Uplift. Local, more siliceous clastic materials were derived from the eroding Sevier Orogenic Belt, along the west margin of the area and minor amounts of sediment were derived from reworked underlying sediments.
Recommended Citation
Norton, Kelly L., "The lithofacies and paleogeography of the Crazy Hollow Formation, central Utah" (1986). Graduate Research Theses & Dissertations. 5983.
https://huskiecommons.lib.niu.edu/allgraduate-thesesdissertations/5983
Extent
xi, 183 pages, maps
Language
eng
Publisher
Northern Illinois University
Rights Statement
In Copyright
Rights Statement 2
NIU theses are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from Huskie Commons for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without the written permission of the authors.
Media Type
Text
Comments
Bibliography: pages [145]-149.