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Geology

Missouri University of Science and Technology

UMR Journal -- V. H. McNutt Colloquium Series

Publication Year

Articles 31 - 37 of 37

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Tectonic History Of Midcontinental United States, Frank G. Snyder Apr 1968

Tectonic History Of Midcontinental United States, Frank G. Snyder

UMR Journal -- V. H. McNutt Colloquium Series

Metasediments of Middle Precambrian, and possibly some of earlier age, form an arcuate trending belt across Missouri, Kansas, and Nebraska. These were intruded by granites of several ages that appear to be part of a continuous wave of Late Precambrfan igneous activity. Late Precambrian events that can be delineated include, besides the igneous activity and formation of iron deposits, development of a Keweenawan basin that extended from Lake Superior into eastern Kansas; igneous activity and metamorphism of Grenville age in the eastern Midcontinent; development of a major fault lineament extending northeastward from northeast Arkansas into the Canadian shield outcrop area …


Major Structures Of The Rocky Mountains Of Colorado And Utah, A. J. Eardley Apr 1968

Major Structures Of The Rocky Mountains Of Colorado And Utah, A. J. Eardley

UMR Journal -- V. H. McNutt Colloquium Series

This paper describes the major structures of Colorado and Utah and presents a theory of origin based on new knowledge of the layering and constitution of the upper mantle and lower crust. It proposes that the Ancestral Rockies and the more modem ones of Cretaceous and early Tertiary age of both the shelf of Colorado and eastern Utah and the miogeosyncline of western Utah are the result of vertical uplifts of the silicic crust. The uplifts are caused by the rise, from the upper mantle, of basalt in scattered places to the base of the silicic crust. This rise domed …


Tectonic Framework Of The Great Basin, Ralph J. Roberts Apr 1968

Tectonic Framework Of The Great Basin, Ralph J. Roberts

UMR Journal -- V. H. McNutt Colloquium Series

The Great Basin is bordered on the west by the Sierra Nevada and on the east by the Colorado Plateau and Rocky Mountains. These tectonically different provinces are genetically related; basin and range structure evolved as part of the tectonic development of western North America.

The Precambrian framework here is not well known, but northeasterly geosynclinal trends, east- west orogenic trends, and northwesterly fracture zones can be projected from the craton or inferred.

Sedimentation in the Cordilleran orthogeosyncline from Cambrian to Devonian time was characterized by an eastern miogeosynclinal (carbonate) and a western eugeosynclinal (siliceous and volcanic) assemblage. In latest …


Geologic Structure And History Of The Sierra Nevada, Paul C. Bateman Apr 1968

Geologic Structure And History Of The Sierra Nevada, Paul C. Bateman

UMR Journal -- V. H. McNutt Colloquium Series

The Sierra Nevada is a huge block of the earth’s crust that has broken free on the east and has been tilted westward. It is composed chiefly of Mesozoic granitic rocks and Paleozoic and Mesozoic metamorphosed sedimentary and volcanic rocks. The granitic rocks constitute the Sierra Nevada batholith, which is part of a more or less continuous belt of plutonic rocks that extends northward from Baja California through the Sierra Nevada at a small angle to the axis of the range and into western Nevada. The batholith is localized in the axial region of a complexly faulted synclinorium. It is …


Umr Journal: A Coast To Coast Tectonic Study Of The United States, University Of Missouri--Rolla Apr 1968

Umr Journal: A Coast To Coast Tectonic Study Of The United States, University Of Missouri--Rolla

UMR Journal -- V. H. McNutt Colloquium Series

The UMR Journal publishes scholarly papers of scientific research and humanistic studies. These publications are distributed from Rolla, Missouri, as exchanges to scientific and humanistic institutions and libraries throughout the world.


Profile Of The Folded Appalachians Of West Virginia, Byron N. Cooper Apr 1968

Profile Of The Folded Appalachians Of West Virginia, Byron N. Cooper

UMR Journal -- V. H. McNutt Colloquium Series

The Appalachian folded belt of southwestern Virginia exemplifies most of the structural and stratigraphic features that are considered typical of the Appalachians as a whole. The folded belt which is only 36 miles wide along the valley course of New River is generally well-defined on the southeast by the western foothills of the Blue Ridge and on the northwest side by a sharp structural front beyond which the beds are relatively gently folded.

Despite the fact that Paleozoic shelf successions of the Central Interior region are known to have controlled the thickness and facies of sedimentary formations within them and …


The California Coast Ranges, John C. Crowell Apr 1968

The California Coast Ranges, John C. Crowell

UMR Journal -- V. H. McNutt Colloquium Series

Western California between the 37th and 40th parallels is part of an active mobile orogenic belt in which sedimentation, deformation, volcanism, and plutonism have been intimately associated since the mid-Mesozoic. At present, the region is still undergoing folding and warping as shown by data from geodetic triangulation networks and geomorphology, and several major high-angle fault zones are seismically active. These faults continue to acquire displacement both suddenly during earthquakes and slowly by gentle creep with no recordable shocks. Pleistocene beds and terraces at places are steeply warped. Strong deformation occurred during the late Pliocene and early Pleistocene. Most of the …