The Great Unconformity near Melrose, Montana

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  • Опубліковано 5 лип 2024
  • This video presents the Great Unconformity exposed in the Camp Creek drainage east of Melrose, Montana. At this location, rocks metamorphosed during the collision of continental plates some 1.8 billion years ago are overlain by ~520 million-year-old beach sandstones of the Flathead Formation. This huge gap in the geologic record is known as the Great Unconformity, and the contact between these different rocks represents over a billion years of erosion and/or non deposition.
    The consensus interpretation of the unconformity is that some 1.8 billion years ago the collision of a continental crustal block called the Medicine Hat Block with the Wyoming Province of the North American craton (continent) resulted in metamorphism and uplift of mountains that might have rivaled the Himalayas today. Once the colliding blocks were sutured and the plate collision ended, the mountains began to erode. Over the next 1.0 to 1.3 billion years, they were eroded down to sea level and much of western North America was a flat, low-lying plain. The ocean rose up around 520 to 515 million years ago, drowning the eroded surface with ocean water and depositing ocean sediments.
    As the sea transgressed across the eroded surface, it first deposited beach sand of the Flathead Sandstone. This rock contains some fossils and abundant sedimentary structures that indicate a marine beach environment. With continued sea-level rise, the beach moved eastward, and the Camp Creek area was covered by deeper water, where fine-grained mud that couldn't settle on the beach were deposited. These deposits are called the Wolsey Shale, and they are loaded with burrows, trilobite tracks and a few, nearly intact trilobite shell fossils. As the sea continued to rise, the source of sand, silt and clay were moved so far away from the area that organisms that filter the water and secrete calcite flourished, depositing limestone of the Meagher Formation.
    Sea-level continued to fluctuate, leaving behind more shale and limestone, marine and non-marine deposits throughout the period from 520 to 245 million years ago, what geologist's call the Paleozoic Era. Many of these rocks are exposed at Camp Creek and throughout the area. There is a map in the video to help you locate the site. You can find specific directions in the 2nd Edition of Roadside Geology of Montana, so get out, explore and enjoy Montana Geology!

КОМЕНТАРІ • 30

  • @wfoybealiii4668
    @wfoybealiii4668 Місяць тому +2

    What a great spot! Structure and sed/strat one can lay one's hands upon! Thanks for sharing!

  • @georgerisberg8830
    @georgerisberg8830 Місяць тому +2

    Shawn Wilsey has a nice viideo on the great unconformity west of Cody, Wyoming. Thanks for your video, great!

  • @nickraschke4737
    @nickraschke4737 Місяць тому

    Gday from Australia. Enjoying the channel. Cheers.

  • @vannemocilac274
    @vannemocilac274 Місяць тому

    I got to go see that last year!

  • @pmm1044
    @pmm1044 Місяць тому +1

    Thank!!
    You suggest that some discussion of every static slide would be helpful

    • @rockdoctorMT
      @rockdoctorMT  Місяць тому +3

      I just learned how to do voiceover today, so next time.

    • @pmm1044
      @pmm1044 Місяць тому

      ⁠Nice!!

  • @TheTruthPlease100
    @TheTruthPlease100 Місяць тому +1

    Shows a great calamity that happened. Pole change, great impact?

    • @rockdoctorMT
      @rockdoctorMT  Місяць тому

      It’s really shows us how long it takes to erode away mountains formed by continental collisions. Sometimes, no geologic record tells us more than the rock itself! The Earth is old, always changing, and we are newcomers to this ancient story. It’s great!

  • @richarddavies7419
    @richarddavies7419 18 днів тому

    Interesting! An even greater gap may be seen just east of Yellowstone Park in the Canyon of the Shoshone River, where a dark red granite, small pegmatite dikes, and metamorphic rocks of 2.8 billion year old Archean age are exposed along the highway. Thinly bedded limestones of the Flathead Formation sit directly on an almost polished surface of the red granite, suggesting glaciation back when the Wyoming Province was part of Rodinia some 700 million years ago.

    • @rockdoctorMT
      @rockdoctorMT  16 днів тому

      I know the spot well. I put the Flathead Sandstone contact just before the tunnel in the Roadside Geology of Yellowstone Country book. I didn’t notice a polished basement surface at that location, but the bedding surface is not well exposed in the road cut.

    • @richarddavies7419
      @richarddavies7419 16 днів тому

      @@rockdoctorMT I peeled back a thin-bedded layer specifically to be able to inspect the granite surface, back in the summer of 1952, when that granite was simply "pre-Cambrian" in age.

    • @rockdoctorMT
      @rockdoctorMT  16 днів тому

      @richarddavies7419 Super cool!

  • @nhragold1922
    @nhragold1922 29 днів тому

    Id be sampling it for sure

  • @robertodebeers2551
    @robertodebeers2551 16 днів тому

    Melrose, Montana, has always been a great unconformity.

  • @pmm1044
    @pmm1044 Місяць тому

    The blue color metamorphic rock is what minerals? And how firmed? Is it schist?

    • @rockdoctorMT
      @rockdoctorMT  Місяць тому +1

      The metamorphic rocks are mineralized. I have found copper-bearing minerals like malachite (green) and azurite (blue). Mine adits and tailings are throughout the area, and there are several sills that are likely Cretaceous and possibly the source of mineralization.

    • @rockdoctorMT
      @rockdoctorMT  Місяць тому +1

      The rock varies from biotite schist to gneiss.

    • @pmm1044
      @pmm1044 Місяць тому

      ⁠thankyou!

  • @FriendsofTaz
    @FriendsofTaz Місяць тому

    Cool. Were you a professor at Montana State University back in 1986? If so, I may have taken your class back then

    • @rockdoctorMT
      @rockdoctorMT  Місяць тому +2

      No, I’ve been at Montana Western in Dillon since 1993. I did an MS at UM, and have taught field camp in Dillon almost continuously since ‘86.

  • @JohnZolla-bp7tl
    @JohnZolla-bp7tl Місяць тому

    I own 20 acres in the Pipestone Pass. Wish I knew more about the geology of the area.

    • @rockdoctorMT
      @rockdoctorMT  Місяць тому +1

      The area is underlain by granitic rock of the Boulder Batholith, an ~80 million year intrusion of magma from the subduction of the Pacific Ocean floor under North America.

  • @jeffreypaul734
    @jeffreypaul734 17 днів тому

    A chunk got washed away. Hmmm

  • @frankwolf3860
    @frankwolf3860 Місяць тому

    Did any of your students, or you!, investigate the pegmatite for the presence of "cool" crystals?

    • @rockdoctorMT
      @rockdoctorMT  Місяць тому

      It’s rather dull by the standards of other pegmatites in the region. No tourmaline, for example, just quartz and feldspar.