Rock Springs Uplift
The Rock Springs Uplift is an area of uplifted Cretaceous to Eocene rocks in Wyoming surrounded and once covered by sediments of the Green River Formation which were deposited in the Eocene Lake Gosiute.[1] The Rock Springs Uplift formed in the Late Cretaceous through the Eocene and is related to the Laramide orogeny.[2] The structure is a north–south trending anticline[3] with a surface expression of approximately 56 miles (90 km) by 28 mi (45 km).[4] The community of Rock Springs is located on the western margin of the uplift.
A recently discovered lithium deposit is estimated at 228,000 tons. Additional deposits in the same formation were extrapolated to be as much as 18 million tons.[5]
Features
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gollark: How is the relativistic culinary initiative going, anyway?
gollark: It was a cool area and I wanted to dig into the ravine anyway, so the border issue wasn't a problem.
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References
- Surdam, Ronald C. and K. O. Stanley, Lacustrine sedimentation during the culminating phase of Eocene Lake Gosiute, Wyoming (Green River Formation), Geological Society of America Bulletin, 1979, 90, no. 1, pp. 93-110
- Selena Mederos, Basil Tikoff1 and Viki Bankey: Geometry, timing, and continuity of the Rock Springs uplift, Wyoming, and Douglas Creek arch, Colorado, Rocky Mountain Geology, Volume 40, Number 2, p. 167-191, December 2005 Abstract
- Rock Springs Uplift, Wyoming Geological Survey
- Rock Springs, Wyoming, 1 x 2 minute Topographic Quadrangle, USGS, 1962
- Money Game Contributors (26 April 2013). "New Wyoming Lithium Deposit". Business Insider. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
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