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Published January 15, 2014 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

High elevation of the 'Nevadaplano' during the Late Cretaceous

Abstract

During the Late Cretaceous, central Nevada may have been a high elevation plateau, the Nevadaplano; some geodynamic models of the western US require thickened crust and high elevations during the Mesozoic to drive the subsequent tectonic events of the Cenozoic while other models do not. To test the hypothesis of high elevations during the late Mesozoic, we used carbonate clumped isotope thermometry to determine the temperature contrast between Late Cretaceous to Paleocene carbonates atop the putative plateau in Nevada versus carbonates from relatively low paleoelevation central Utah site. Lacustrine carbonates from the Nevada site preserve summer temperatures ∼13 °C cooler than summer temperatures from paleosol carbonates from the Utah site, after correcting for ∼1.2 °C of secular climatic cooling between the times of carbonate deposition at the two sites. This ∼13 °C temperature difference implies an elevation difference between the two sites of ∼2.2–3.1 km; including uncertainties from age estimation and climate change broadens this estimate to ⩾2 km. Our findings support crustal thickness estimates and Cenozoic tectonic models that imply thickened crust and high elevation in Nevada during the Mesozoic.

Additional Information

© 2013 Elsevier B.V. Received 8 January 2013. Received in revised form 6 October 2013. Accepted 26 October 2013. Available online 20 November 2013. Editor: J. Lynch-Stieglitz. We thank T. Wright for assistance in the field and B. Wernicke for helpful discussions. We also thank three anonymous reviewers for their critical and helpful comments and suggestions, which improved this manuscript. Funding for this study was provided by NSF Tectonics grant EAR-0838576 to P.L.K. and grants to J.M.E. from NSF.

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