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Grand
Canyon May Be As Old As Dinosaurs, According To New Geologic
Dating Study
Thursday, April 10, 2008
New
geological evidence indicates the Grand Canyon may be so old that
dinosaurs once lumbered along its rim, according to a study by
researchers from the University of Colorado at Boulder and the
California Institute of Technology.
The team used a technique known
as radiometric dating to show the Grand Canyon may have formed
more than 55 million years ago, pushing back its assumed origins
by 40 million to 50 million years. The researchers gathered
evidence from rocks in the canyon and on surrounding plateaus
that were deposited near sea level several hundred million years
ago before the region uplifted and eroded to form the canyon.
A paper on the subject will be
published in the May issue of the Geological Society of America
Bulletin. CU-Boulder geological sciences Assistant Professor
Rebecca Flowers, lead author and a former Caltech postdoctoral
researcher, collaborated with Caltech geology Professor Brian
Wernicke and Caltech geochemistry Professor Kenneth Farley on the
study.
"As rocks moved to the
surface in the Grand Canyon region, they cooled off," said
Flowers. "The cooling history of the rocks allowed us to
reconstruct the ancient topography, telling us the Grand Canyon
has an older prehistory than many had thought."
The team believes an ancestral
Grand Canyon developed in its eastern section about 55 million
years ago, later linking with other segments that had evolved
separately. "It's a complicated picture because different
segments of the canyon appear to have evolved at different times
and subsequently were integrated," Flowers said.
The ancient sandstone in the
canyon walls contains grains of a phosphate mineral known as
apatite -- hosting trace amounts of the radioactive elements
uranium and thorium -- which expel helium atoms as they decay,
she said. An abundance of the three elements, paired with
temperature information from Earth's interior, provided the team
a clock of sorts to calculate when the apatite grains were
embedded in rock a mile deep -- the approximate depth of the
canyon today -- and when they cooled as they neared Earth's
surface as a result of erosion.
Apatite samples from the bottom
of the Upper Granite Gorge region of the Grand Canyon yield
similar dates as samples collected on the nearby plateau, said
Caltech's Wernicke. "Because both canyon and plateau samples
resided at nearly the same depth beneath the Earth's surface 55
million years ago, a canyon of about the same dimensions of today
may have existed at least that far back, and possibly as far back
as the time of dinosaurs at the end of the Cretaceous period 65
million years ago."
One of the most surprising
results from the study is the evidence showing the adjacent
plateaus around the Grand Canyon may have eroded away as swiftly
as the Grand Canyon itself, each dropping a mile or more, said
Flowers. Small streams on the plateaus appear to have been just
as effective at stripping away rock as the ancient Colorado River
was at carving the massive canyon.
"If you stand on the rim
of the Grand Canyon today, the bottom of the ancestral canyon
would have sat over your head, incised into rocks that have since
been eroded away," said Flowers. The ancestral Colorado
River was likely running in the opposite direction millions of
years ago, she said.
When the canyon was formed, it
probably looked like a much deeper version of present-day Zion
Canyon, which cuts through strata of the Mesozoic era dating from
about 250 million to 65 million years ago, Wernicke said. From 28
million to 15 million years ago, a pulse of erosion deepened the
already-formed canyon and also scoured surrounding plateaus,
stripping off the Mesozoic strata to reveal the Paleozoic rocks
visible today, he said.
The prevailing belief is that
the canyon was incised by an ancient river about six million
years ago as the surrounding plateau began rising from sea level
to the current elevation of about 7,000 feet. The new scenario
described in the GSA Bulletin by Flowers and her colleagues is
consistent with recent evidence by other geologists using
radiometric dating techniques indicating the Grand Canyon is
significantly older than scientists had long believed.
Source:
University of Colorado, Boulder

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