학술논문

Late Paleogene emergence of a North American loess plateau
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Geology (Boulder). 48(3):273-277
Subject
12|Stratigraphy
atmospheric circulation
Cenozoic
Central Rocky Mountains
clastic sediments
climate change
deposition
environmental effects
Eocene
grain size
Great Plains
lithofacies
lithostratigraphy
loess
magnetic properties
magnetic susceptibility
magnetostratigraphy
Nebraska
North America
Oligocene
paleoclimatology
paleoenvironment
Paleogene
paleohydrology
paleomagnetism
Rocky Mountains
sediments
Tertiary
transport
U. S. Rocky Mountains
United States
uplifts
upper Eocene
White River
White River Group
wind transport
Wyoming
Language
English
ISSN
0091-7613
Abstract
The relative roles of tectonics and global climate in forming the hydroclimate for widespread eolian deposition remain controversial. Oligocene loess has been previously documented in the interior of western United States, but its spatiotemporal pattern and causes remain undetermined. Through new stratigraphic record documentation and data compilation, we reveal the time transgressive occurrence of loess beginning in the latest Eocene in the central Rocky Mountains, that expands eastward to the Great Plains across the Eocene-Oligocene transition (EOT). Our climate simulations show that moderate uplift of the southern North America Cordillera initiated drying in the Cordilleran hinterland and immediate foreland, forming a potential dust source and sink, and global cooling at the EOT expanded the drying and eolian deposition eastward by causing retreat of the North American Monsoon. Therefore, the eolian deposition reflects continental aridification induced both by regional tectonism and global climate change during the late Paleogene.