Home » News » -title Wyoming’s Ancient Geology: From Equator to Yellowstone Hotspot

-title Wyoming’s Ancient Geology: From Equator to Yellowstone Hotspot

by David Harrison – Chief Editor

Ancient ⁤wyoming Once straddled the Equator, Geological Evidence Reveals

JACKSON HOLE, WYOMING ​ – A groundbreaking analysis of ancient volcanic deposits ⁣in wyoming is rewriting the state’s geological ⁣history, confirming it once lay near the equator millions of ⁢years ago. New research focusing on the Kilgore Tuff and Huckleberry ⁤Ridge Tuff – remnants of massive Yellowstone super-eruptions – provides compelling evidence of a dramatically different past for⁤ the region, and illuminates the forces that shaped the‍ iconic⁢ landscape of Jackson Hole.

The story of Wyoming‘s equatorial past is etched in the angles‍ of these ancient ⁢volcanic flows. Geologist John Hebberger Jr. has observed‌ that the Kilgore Tuff, formed ⁤4.5 million years ago by a Yellowstone volcano located ‍west of present-day Wyoming, dips at 22 degrees.The younger Huckleberry Ridge Tuff, created two million years ago in the‍ current Yellowstone⁣ location, exhibits a shallower dip of 11 degrees. These angles aren’t random; they indicate the initial movement ​along the ⁣Teton Fault, the geological feature responsible for the down-dropping of the land that would ⁤eventually become Jackson Hole. ‌Understanding‍ this ancient positioning and subsequent⁤ tectonic‌ activity is⁢ crucial for assessing long-term seismic risk and predicting future geological events in the Intermountain ​West.

Millions⁤ of years ago, ​the landmass encompassing⁣ modern-day Wyoming⁢ wasn’t where it is today. Continental drift placed it much closer to the equator. The Kilgore Tuff’s formation, predating the current⁣ Yellowstone hotspot’s location, occurred when the⁢ ancestral volcano​ was situated in a region resembling present-day Oregon. Over ⁢eons, ⁤the North⁢ American plate shifted, carrying Wyoming northward to it’s current latitude.‍

This movement wasn’t without ​outcome. ⁣The faulting that created Jackson Hole also ⁤resulted in the loss⁤ of the western portion of the Gros Ventre⁤ Mountains,​ which were effectively truncated, once extending further into eastern Idaho. The study of these ancient tuffs provides ‌a window into the immense ⁤geological forces that have sculpted the American West,demonstrating a dynamic Earth constantly reshaping its⁣ surface.

You may also like

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.