1972
DOI: 10.3133/pp729a
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Geology of pre-Tertiary rocks in the northern part of Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming

Abstract: Yellowstone National Park, the oldest of the areas set aside as part of the national park system, lies amidst the Rocky Mountains in northwestern Wyoming and adjacent parts of Montana and Idaho. Embracing large, diverse, and complex geologic features, the park is in an area that is critical to the interpretation of many significant regional geologic problems. In order to provide basic data bearing on these problems, the U.S. Geological Survey in 1965 initiated a broad program of comprehensive geologic and geop… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…North striking en echelon normal faults to the south of Yellowstone caldera, including the Teton Fault, and the north striking Gallatin Fault between Norris Junction and Mammoth Hot Springs indicate E-W extension [Christiansen, 2001]. Two alignments of postcaldera volcanic vents within the caldera (Figure 7) have been suggested as evidence of links between the extension structures north and south of the caldera [Ruppel, 1972;Christiansen, 2001]. East to SE striking faults to the west and NW of Yellowstone, including the Hebgen Lake and Red Canyon faults which ruptured in 1959, indicate extension is approximately N-S in that region [Doser, 1985].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…North striking en echelon normal faults to the south of Yellowstone caldera, including the Teton Fault, and the north striking Gallatin Fault between Norris Junction and Mammoth Hot Springs indicate E-W extension [Christiansen, 2001]. Two alignments of postcaldera volcanic vents within the caldera (Figure 7) have been suggested as evidence of links between the extension structures north and south of the caldera [Ruppel, 1972;Christiansen, 2001]. East to SE striking faults to the west and NW of Yellowstone, including the Hebgen Lake and Red Canyon faults which ruptured in 1959, indicate extension is approximately N-S in that region [Doser, 1985].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[41] If the alignments of volcanic vents within the caldera are links between the extensional structures north and south of the caldera as has been suggested [Ruppel, 1972;Christiansen, 2001], then the orientation of those alignments indicate ENE extension within the caldera (Figure 7). The direction of maximum extension from GPS is consistent with extension inferred from the vent alignments in central caldera, but inconsistent in the southwestern caldera [Puskas et al, 2002].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The northwest-trending Buffalo Plateau-Bear tooth Mountain block is bounded on the southwest by the Gardner fault, a high-angle reverse fault that cuts gently folded youngest Cretaceous sedimentary rocks (Ruppel, 1972). Major uplift of the Beartooth block began in Paleocene (Fort Union Formation) time and culminated in early Eocene time according to Foose and others (1961).…”
Section: Structure and Geologic Historymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The sedimentary rocks are underlain by Precambrian crystalline rocks 2.6 b.y. old (Ruppel, 1972;Reed and Zartman, 1973). Paleozoic rocks are exposed at only a few localities.…”
Section: Geologic Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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