The geology of Wyoming includes some of the oldest Archean rocks in North America, overlain by thick marine and terrestrial sediments formed during the Paleozoic, Mesozoic and Cenozoic, including oil, gas and coal deposits. Throughout its geologic history, Wyoming has been uplifted several times during the formation of the Rocky Mountains, which produced complicated faulting that traps hydrocarbons.[1]
Geologic history, stratigraphy and tectonics
The Precambrian crystalline basement rocks of Wyoming include schist and gneiss in the Wyoming Craton, which formed during the Archean beginning 3. 6 billion years ago. The Wyoming Craton was sutured together with the Superior Craton and Hearne Craton during the Trans-Hudson Orogeny. The Wyoming Craton was a separate continent until it joined the proto-North American continent Laurentia 1.86 billion years ago.
Along its southern margin, the Wyoming Craton is faulted against younger Proterozoic rocks from 1.7 billion years ago, which form the Front Range, extending into Colorado. The Mullen Creek-Nash Fork fault zone extends northeast to the Black Hills.[2]
Dryland conditions have continued since the end of the Cretaceous, through the Cenozoic and the Laramide orogeny uplifted the Rocky Mountains through the Eocene. Wyoming has numerous Laramide orogeny-related thrust faults, which form the Wind River Range, Bighorn Range and Laramie Range, with more ductile sedimentary rocks folded over Precambrian igneous rocks at the core of each range. This foreland deformation is particularly visible in Clarks Fork Canyon, the Beartooth Range and the Gros Ventre Range.
Large quantities of oil and gas are held beneath the anticline formations formed by the west dipping, low angle faults of the overthrust belt. Large coal beds formed as highlands eroded throughout the Paleocene, burying organic material. In the Fort Union Formation, coal beds are as much as 100 feet thick.
During the last 2.5 million years of the Quaternary continued uplift has accelerated erosion, as the Teton Range formed and the Yellowstone Caldera formed in its present location.
References
^Lageson, David; Spearing, Darwin (1988). Roadside Geology of Wyoming. Mountain Press Publishing Company.