Academic literature on the topic 'Roberts Mountains (Utah)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Roberts Mountains (Utah)"

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Finney, Stanley C., and Raymond L. Ethington. "Graptolite and conodont faunas in Ordovician Vinini Formation, Roberts Mountains, central Nevada, demonstrate that the Roberts Mountains allochthon is not an exotic terrane." Paleontological Society Special Publications 6 (1992): 97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s2475262200006572.

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Two very different plate-tectonic models have been proposed to explain the development and emplacement of the Robert Mountains allochthon (RMA) onto the North America craton during the Late Devonian-Early Mississippian Antler Orogeny. In one model, the RMA represents a far-traveled accretionary prism that migrated eastwards over a west-dipping subduction zone. In the other, the eugeoclinal strata of the RMA were deposited on the continental rise of western North America within a closed back-arc basin. Siliciclastic sediments, especially quartz sandstones, compose much of the RMA, yet knowledge of their provenance is poor even though such knowledge is essential for evaluating the two plate-tectonic models.We have recently obtained large collections of graptolites and conodonts from turbiditic quartz sandstones in the Lower Member of the Vinini Formation in the Roberts Mountains. These sandstones of lower Whiterockian age are correlative with the lower Antelope Valley Limestone that deposited on the western shelf of North America. The diverse graptolite fauna represents the oceanic isograptid fauna. However, it also includes pendent didymograptids and rooted dendroids that were restricted to shallow shelf seas. The dendroids (Cactograptus, Dendrograptus, Desmograptus, and Dictyonema) were benthic organisms, could not have lived in a deep marine setting, and are also common in shallow-water carbonate strata of western Utah. All specimens within the turbiditic quartz sandstones of the Vinini were broken before final deposition and burial, but specimens from Utah are generally complete. The diverse conodont fauna is virtually identical to that found in the lower Antelope Valley Limestone, as well as in coeval strata in western Utah. Although it includes a few deep (cold) water, cosmopolitan species, it is dominated by species that are otherwise known only from shallow water strata deposited on the North American craton.We conclude that turbidity currents transported these exotic graptolites and conodonts down from the shelf and onto the rise along with the quartz sands in which they occur. Thus, the Whiterockian quartz sandstones in the Vinini Formation must have a North American provenance just as the fossils do. This is strong evidence that 1) the RMA is not exotic to North America, 2) the eugeoclinal strata of the RMA were deposited on the western continental rise of North America and on the eastern side of a back-arc basin, and 3) the RMA was thrust onto the western shelf of North America by closure of this back-arc basin.
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Clark, Donald. "Northern Cedar Mountains Red Beds, Tooele County." Geosites 1 (March 12, 2019): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.31711/geosites.v1i1.57.

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Recent mapping for the Tooele 30' x 60' quadrangle geologic map revealed more information about interesting exposures of red beds cropping out in an 11-mile (18-km) swath along the northwestern flank of the Cedar Mountains (Clark and others, 2017, 2019 in review). They are unusual because such rocks are seldom preserved in northwestern Utah, an area known for thick thrust sheets of Paleozoic marine carbonate and sandstone. These rocks were first mapped by Robert Maurer for his Ph.D. dissertation on the geology of the Cedar Mountains (Maurer, 1970). He called them North Horn (?) Formation and noted the presence of fresh-water snails (Gyraulus sp.) that a paleontologist said were probably of late Paleocene or Eocene age. The North Horn Formation is considered Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian age) to Paleocene or Eocene (~70 to 60 Ma) in age. However, recent detrital zircon analysis from sandstone in the unit suggest a much older age, with the youngest grains (maximum depositional age) of 117 Ma, or Early Cretaceous, Aptian (UGS and O’Sullivan, 2017). Two samples of gray mudstone taken for fossil pollen in the unit did not produce any usable material. Inspection of these rocks by Don DeBlieux (Utah Geological Survey paleontologist) revealed no bone or other biological material at this location.
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Bostwick, Todd. "Prehistory of the Carson Desert and Stillwater Mountains: Environment, Mobility, and Subsistence in a Great Basin Wetland, by Robert L. Kelly, University of Utah Anthropological Papers Number 123, Salt Lake City, 2001." Bulletin of the History of Archaeology 11, no. 2 (November 29, 2001): 16. http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/bha.11206.

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Leach, Melinda. "Prehistory of the Carson Desert and Stillwater Mountains: Environment, Mobility, and Subsistence in a Great Basin Wetland. Robert L. Kelly, with contributions by Virginia L. Butler, Linda Scott Cummings, Steven D. Grantham, Richard E. Hughes, Keith K. Katzer, Stephanie Livingston, David Rhode, Nancy D. Sharp, and Peter Wigand. 2001. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City. University of Utah Anthropological Papers No. 123. vii + 325 pp., $45.00 (paper), ISBN 0-87480-672-0." American Antiquity 69, no. 3 (July 2004): 590–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4128412.

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Books on the topic "Roberts Mountains (Utah)"

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Mangun, Kimberley, and Larry R. Gerlach. Making Utah History. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252037467.003.0005.

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This chapter focuses on Utah, another Mountain state, using a case study of press coverage of the 1925 lynching of African American Robert Marshall. It analyzes early-twentieth-century race relations and a recent contentious debate over the public memory of racial lynching in a state historically dominated by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (the Mormons). Memphis journalist Ida B. Wells was the first to identify the underlying causes of lynching. In three long investigative pamphlets published between 1892 and 1900, she discussed how allegations of rape obscured the real reason behind the killings of black men: white rage over economic advances among a rising black middle class. Lynching has received considerable scholarly and popular attention since Wells' groundbreaking work.
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