AN ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS OF DIANE CAROL WISE for the degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE in Geology presented on August 13, 1976 Title: PALEOZOIC GEOLOGY OF THE DOBBIN SUMMIT- CLEAR CREEK AREA, MONITOR RANGE, NYiE COUNTY, NEVADA Abstract approved: Redacted for Privacy son Paleozoic limestones, dolomites, quartz arenites, and other clastic rocks were mapped in the vicinity of Dobbin Summit and Clear Creek in the central Monitor Range. Sedimentary rock units present in this area represent the shallow-shelf eastern assemblage and basin and also the basin-slope facies of the traditional limestone- clastic assemblage. The four oldest, Ordovician, units were deposited in shallow shelf environments. The Lower Ordovician Goodwin Formation is composed of about 1200 feet of calcareous shales and thin-bedded limestones. The overlying Antelope Valley Limestone is about 500 feet thick and consists of wackestones, packstones, and rare algal grainstones.The Copenhagen Formation (135 feet thick) is the highest regressive deposit of sandstone, siltstone, and limestone below the transgressive Eureka Quartzite.The Eureka is a quartz arenite 181 feet thick, with an intercalated shallow marine dolomite member. The transition from shallow to deep water conditions can be seen in the change from algal boundstones to laminated lime mud- stones in the Hanson Creek Formation (190 feet thick).The super- jacent Roberts Mountains Formation (285 feet thick) is composed of lime mudstones and allodapic beds deposited in basinal, deep water conditions.During earliest Devonian time, the facies boundary be- tween eastern dolomites and limestone-clastic transitional facies was situated within the map area.The Lone Mountain Dolomite (510 feet thick) is representative of the eastern facies.The lime- stone-clastic facies are represented by basinal lime mudstones and allodapic skeletal beds of the Windmill Limestone (170 feet thick), the Rabbit Hill Limestone (315 feet thick) and the Denay Limestone (150 feet thick).The upper plate of the Roberts Mountains thrust interrupts the stratigraphic sequence of the area, and an alloch- thonous unit of western assemblage cherts and fine grained clastics (Ordovician Vinini Formation) overlies Middle Devonian rocks. The Mississippian rocks of the area are part of the "overlap assemblage!! and overlieolder facies boundaries in central Nevada. The Webb Equivalent is a siliceous argillite 400 feet thick and the Camp Creek Equivalent (350 feet thick) is a sequence of distal and proximal turbidites.Both were deposited in the elongate basin which paralleled the rising Antler orogenic highland to the west of the map area during early Mississippian time.The filling of the basin is indicated by the change, within the Diamond Peak- Chainman Equivalent rocks (750 feet thick), from fine-grained limestones and thin sandstones to thick chert-pebble and limestone conglomerates. Source for the detrital chert was western assemblage rocks, then eroding from the Antler Highland, and eastern shelf carbonates. The final episode of the Paleozoic evident in the area was uplift, erosion, and tectonism followed by deposition of shallow-water fossiliferous Pennsylvanian rocks (150 feet thick in incomplete section), to form an angular unconformity. The extreme thinness of uppermost Ordovician through Middle Devonian strata may be due to a shift from the eastern shelf depositional regime to a slope and basinal regime. The stratigraphic sequence of these rocks in the map area closely resembles that of Antelope Valley, 10 miles to the north.Mississippian overlap assemblage rocks more closely match those of the Carlin-Pinyon Range area 100 miles to the north. Paleozoic Geology of the Dobbin Summit - Clear Creek Area, Monitor Range, Nye County, Nevada by Diane Wise A THESIS submitted to Oregon State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science June 1977 APPROVED: Redactedfor Privacy Ass ciate Professoofeology in charge of major Redacted for Privacy He &d of Department of Geology Redacted for Privacy Dean of Graduate School Date thesis is presented August 13, 1976 Typed by A & S Bookkeeping for Diane Carol Wise ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I appreciate the efforts of the many people who donated their time and knowledge to this thesis.Dr. J. G. Johnson suggested the field area and provided much-needed support and patience for what became a two-year project.Dr. Michael Murphy and John Dunham of the University- of California at Riverside took time from their summer field schedule to field check the area.Both made helpful suggestions and shared their knowledge of Nevada stratigraphy. Claudia Dubois handled preparations of conodont samples. Kurt Klaffke acted as field assistant for a week and helped with fossil collecting.Barbara Priest drafted the stratigraphic columns and part of the geologic map. I also thank the paleontologists who identified fossils from the map area: Gilbert Klapper, J. G. Johnson, M. T. Wise, John L. Carter, Richard A. Flory, W. A. Oliver, Jr., and Dave Rohr. Dr. E. M. Taylor and Dr. D. A. Bostwick served on the thesis committee and were kind enough to make room in their sum- mer schedules to read the manuscript on short notice. Last, but not least, I dedicate this thesis to Michael Wise - husband, field assistant, paleontologist, photographer, biostrati- grapher, typist, and provider of moral (and physical) support- without whose efforts this project would never have gotten on the ground. Figure 1.Mississippian and Pennsylvanian rocks of Clear Creek Canyon. TABLE OF CONTENTS Page INTRODUCTION 1 Purpose 1 Location and Accessibility 1 Previous Work 2 Geologic Setting 6 Methods 8 Terminology 9 TOPOGRAPHY, GEOMORPHOLOGY, AND VEGETATION 11 GOODWIN FORMATION 13 General Statement 13 Lower Member 14 Upper Member 15 Thickness and Contacts 15 Depositional Environment 16 Regional Significance 17 ANTELOPE VALLEY FORMATION 19 General Statement 19 Location and Thickness 20 Middle Unit 20 Upper Unit 22 Depositional Environment 22 Regional Significance 24 COPENHAGEN FORMATION 27 General Statement 27 Location and Contacts 28 Lower Member 28 Intercalated Member 29 Depositional Environment 30 Regional Significance 30 EUREKA QUARTZITE 34 General Statement 34 Location and Thickness 34 Lithology 35 Contacts 36 Page Depositional Environment 36 Regional Significance 37 HANSON CREEK FORMATION 40 General Description 40 Litho logy 41 Contacts and Thickness 43 Depositional Environment 44 Regional Significance 45 ROBERTS MOUNTAINS FORMATION 47 General Statement 47 Dobbin Summit Section 48 Hill 10385 Section 51 Contacts 51 Age 52 Depositional Environment 52 Regional Significance 53 LONE MOUNTAIN DOLOMITE 58 General Statement 58 Lithology 58 Depositional Environment 60 Regional Significance 60 WINDMILL LIMESTONE 63 General Statement 63 Lithology 64 Fossils and Age 65 Lower Contact 65 Depositional Environment 67 Regional Significance 68 RABBIT HILL LIMESTONE 70 General Statement 70 Lithology 71 Depositional Environment 73 Regional Significance 74 DENAY LIMEST ONE 77 General Statement 77 Lithology 78 Page Age 79 Depositional Environment 79 Regional Significance 80 LOWER MISSISSIPPIAN (KINDERHOOK- OSAGE) ROCKS 83 General Statement 83 Webb Equivalent 84 Camp Creek Equivalent 85 Age 88 Depositional Environment 88 Regional Significance 90 DIAMOND PEAK - CHAINMAN EQUIVALENT 96 General Statement 96 Lithology 97 Fossils 99 Depositional Environment 100 Regional Significance 101 PENNSYLVANIAN ROCKS 105 General Statement 105 Lithology and Age 105 Depositional Environment 106 ALLOCHTHONOUS ROCKS 108 STRUCTURE 112 General Statement 112 Thrust Faulting 112 Normal Faulting 114 CONCLUSION 116 REFERENCES 119 APPENDIX Faunal lists and localities 124 LIST OF PLATES Plate Page 1. Measured section at hill 10385. in pocket 2. Composite of measured sections below thrust plate at Dobbin Summit in pocket 3. Composite of measured sections above thrust plate at Dobbin Summit. in pocket 4. Geology of the Dobbin Summit-Clear Creek area, Monitor Range, Nye County, Nevada. in pocket LIST OF FIGURES Figure Page 1. Mississippian and Pennsylvanian rocks of Clear Creek Canyon. Preface 2. Index map of Nevada, showing counties and area of Figure 3. 3 3. Index map of central Nevada, showing thesis area. 4 4. Summary stratigraphic section for the Dobbin Summit-Clear Creek area. 5 5. Lower member, Goodwin Formation.Thicker beds are lime wackestone. 18 6. Micrite core and non-concentric lamination of algal nodule from lower part of the Antelope Valley Formation. 25 7. Concentrically laminated algal nodules from upper part of the Antelope Valley Formation. 26 8. Basal laminated sandstone, Copenhagen Fcirmation, Vertical burrowings in upper third of hand specimen. 32 9. Brown-weathering siltstone with gray limestone lenses, Copenhagen Formation intercalated member. 33 10. Darker burrowings in uppermost Eureka Quartzite. 38 11. Dolomitic quartz arenite, transitional between the Eureka Quartzite and the Hanson Creek Formation. 39 12. Algal boundstone with oolitic grainstone intraclasts, lower Hanson Creek Formation. 46 Figure Page 13. Thick clastic limebreccia bed, top of Roberts Mountains Formation at Dobbin Summit. 55 14. Platy laminated dolomite, Roberts Mountains Formation. 56 15. Graded interval near base of Roberts Mountains Formation. 57 16. Ordovician through lower Mississippian section at hill 10385.View is southeast. 62 17. Coarsely graded limestone bed, lower part of Windmill Limestone at Dobbin Summit. 69 18. Above: Blocky allodapic beds of upper Rabbit Hill Limestone,
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