학술논문

Annually resolved sediments in the classic Clarkia lacustrine deposits (Idaho, USA) during the middle Miocene climate optimum
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Geology (Boulder). 49(8):916-920
Subject
06A|Sedimentary petrology - sed rocks, sediments
03|Geochronology
absolute age
Cenozoic
chemical composition
Clarkia Idaho
Columbia River Basalt Group
Idaho
lacustrine environment
laminations
lithostratigraphy
middle Miocene
Miocene
Neogene
nesosilicates
orthosilicates
paleoenvironment
planar bedding structures
sedimentary structures
sedimentation
sedimentation rates
Shoshone County Idaho
silicates
spectra
Tertiary
U/Pb
United States
X-ray fluorescence spectra
zircon
zircon group
Language
English
ISSN
0091-7613
Abstract
The world-renowned Miocene Clarkia paleolake in northern Idaho (USA) is closely associated with Columbia River Basalt Group volcanism. The flood basalt dammed a local drainage system to form the paleolake, which preserved a plant fossil Lagerstätte in its deposits. However, the precise age and temporal duration of the lake remain unsettled. We present the first unequivocal U-Pb zircon ages from interbedded volcanic ashes at the P-33 type location, constraining the deposition to 15.78±0.039 Ma. Using micro-X-ray fluorescence and petrographic and spectral analyses, we establish the annual characteristics of laminations throughout the stratigraphic profile using the distribution of elemental ratios, mineral assemblages, and grain-size structures, as well as organic and fossil contents. Consequently, the ∼7.5-m-thick varved deposit at the type location P-33 represents ∼840 yr of deposition, coincident with the end of the main phase of Columbia River Basalt Group eruptions during the Miocene Climate Optimum. The timing and temporal resolution of the deposit offer a unique opportunity to study climate change in unprecedented detail during global warming associated with carbon-cycle perturbations.