
Kolob Canyons from the end of Kolob
Canyons Road.
Stream erosion has incised the Kolob Plateau to form canyons
that expose the red-orange colored Navajo Sandstone and other
formations.
The
geology of the Zion and Kolob canyons area
includes nine known exposed formation, all visible in Zion National
Park
in the U.S. state of Utah
.
Together, these formations represent about 150 million years of
mostly
Mesozoic-aged
sedimentation in that part of
North America. Part of a
super-sequence of rock units called the
Grand Staircase, the formations exposed in
the Zion and Kolob area were deposited in several different
environments that range from the warm shallow seas of the Kaibab
and Moenkopi formations,
streams and
lakes of the Chinle, Moenave, and Kayenta formations to
the large
deserts of the Navajo and Temple
Cap formations and dry near shore environments of the Carmel
Formation.
Subsequent uplift of the
Colorado
Plateau slowly raised these formations much higher than where
they were deposited. This steepened the
stream gradient of the ancestral rivers and
other streams on the
plateau. The
faster-moving streams took advantage of uplift-created joints in
the rocks to remove all
Cenozoic-aged
formations and cut gorges into the plateaus. Zion Canyon was cut by
the North Fork of the
Virgin River in
this way.
Lava flows and
cinder cones covered parts of the area during
the later part of this process.
Zion National Park includes an elevated plateau that consists of
sedimentary formations that dip
very gently to the east.
This means that the oldest strata are exposed along the Virgin River in the
Zion Canyon part of the park, and the youngest are exposed in the
Kolob
Canyons
section. The plateau is bounded on the east
by the Sevier Fault Zone, and on the west by the Hurricane Fault
Zone.
Weathering and erosion along
north-trending
faults and fractures
influence the formation of landscape features, such as canyons, in
this region.

This geologic cross section shows the
layering of the below-mentioned formations
Grand Staircase and basement rocks
The Grand
Staircase is an immense sequence of sedimentary rock layers that stretch south
from Bryce Canyon
National Park
through Zion National Park and into the Grand Canyon
. Within this sequence, the oldest exposed
formation in the Zion and Kolob canyons area is the youngest
exposed formation in
the Grand Canyon—the approximately 240 million year old
Kaibab
limestone. Bryce Canyon to the
northeast continues where the Zion and Kolob areas end by
presenting
Cenozoic-aged rocks. In fact,
the youngest formation seen in the Zion and Kolob area is the
oldest
exposed
formation in Bryce Canyon—the Dakota Sandstone.
Around 275 million years ago in the
Permian period, the Zion and Kolob area was a
relatively flat
basin near
sea level on the western margin of the
supercontinent
Pangaea. Sediments from
surrounding
mountains added weight to the
basin, keeping it at relatively the
same
elevation. These sediments later lithified (turned to rock) to
form the Toroweap Formation, now exposed in the Grand Canyon to the
south but not in the Zion and Kolob area. This formation is not
exposed in the park, though it does form its
basement rock.
Deposition of sediments
Kaibab Limestone (Upper Permian)
In later Permian time, the Toroweap Basin was invaded by the warm,
shallow edge of the vast
Panthalassa
ocean in what local geologists call the Kaibab Sea. At that time,
Utah and Wyoming were near the
equator on
the western margin of the supercontinent Pangaea.

Hurricane Cliffs/Kaibab
Formation
Starting 260 million years ago, the yellowish-gray limestone
of the
fossil-rich
Kaibab Limestone was laid down as a limy
ooze in a tropical
climate. During this
time,
sponge, such as
Actinocoelia meandrina,
proliferated, only to be buried in lime mud and their internal
silica needles (spicules) dissolved and recrystallized to form
discontinuous layers of light-colored
chert.
In the park, this formation can be found in the Hurricane Cliffs
above the Kolob Canyons Visitor Center and in an
escarpment along
Interstate 15 as it skirts the park.
This is the same formation that rims the Grand Canyon to the
south.
Farther to the west, a complex
island arc
assemblage formed above a
subduction
zone.
To the east, in western Colorado
, a mountain
range similar to today’s Himalayas called the Uncompahgre Mountains
bordered the Utah lowland. The interfingering of the Kaibab
with the
White Rim Sandstone,
now
exposed in Capital
Reef National Park area, to the east suggests that the marine
facies of the Kaibab migrated eastward in response to a relative
sea-level rise, or transgression (the White Rim is not exposed in
the Zion area). The sea moved back and forth across Utah, but by
the Middle Permian, the sea had withdrawn and the Kaibab Limestone
was exposed to erosion, creating
karst
topography and channels reaching 30 m (100 ft) in
depth.
Moenkopi Formation (Lower Triassic)

Moenkopi Formation
Volcanoes continued to erupt through the Early
Triassic on the north–south trending island
arc to the west, which was located along what is now the border
between California
and Nevada
.
Shallow, marine water stretched from eastern Utah to eastern Nevada
over a beveled
continental shelf.
As the sea withdrew around 230 million years ago, fluvial,
mudflat, sabkha, and shallow marine environments developed,
depositing
gypsum (from
lagoon evaporites),
mudstones, limestones,
sandstones,
shales, and
siltstones.
It took many thousands of thin layers of these sediments to form
the thick
Moenkopi Formation. A
prograding shoreline laid down muddy delta sediments which mixed
with limy marine deposits. The fossilized plants and animals in the
Moenkopi are evidence of a climate shift to a warm tropical setting
that may have experienced
monsoonal, wet-dry
conditions.
The Red Canyon Conglomerate, the basal member of the Moenkopi,
fills broad east-flowing paleochannels carved into the Kaibab
Limestone. Some of these channels are up to several tens of feet
deep and may reach 200 ft (61 m) deep in the St. George
area. A thin, poorly developed soil, or regolith, formed over the
paleotopographic high areas between the channels.
The depositional environment was a nearshore one where the seashore
alternated between advance (transgression) and retreat
(regression). At Zion, the limestones and fossils of the Timpoweap,
Virgin Limestone, and Shnabkaib members of the Moenkopi Formation
document transgressive episodes. Unlike the Timpoweap and Virgin
Limestone members, the Shnabkaib contains abundant gypsum and
interbedded mudstone resulting from deposition in a restricted
marine environment with complex watertable fluctuations.
Regressive, red-bed layers separate the transgressive strata.
Ripple marks, mud cracks, and thinly laminated bedding suggest that
these intervening red shale and siltstone units were deposited in
tidal flat and coastalplain environments.
Outcrops
of this brightly colored red, brown, and pink banded formation can
be seen in the Kolob Canyons section of the park and in buttes on either side of State Route 9 between Rockville, Utah
to the south and Virgin, Utah
to the southwest of the park borders.
Progressively higher beds are exposed until the top of the
formation is reached at the mouth of Parunweap Canyon (when
traveling to the park on Route 9).
Chinle Formation (Upper Triassic)
Later, uplift exposed the Moenkopi Formation to
erosion and Utah became part of a large interior
basin drained by north and northwest-flowingrivers in the Upper
Triassic. Shallow river deposition along with
volcanic ash eventually became the
mineral-rich
Chinle
Formation.
The irregular contact zone, or unconformity, between the Chinle and the
underlying Moenkopi can be seen between Rockville and Grafton, Utah
).

Chinle Formation
Petrified wood and fossils of animals
adapted to
swampy environments, such as
phytosaurs,
lungfish, and lacustrine
bivalves, have been found in this formation as well
as
conifer trees,
cycads,
ferns, and
horsetails. Relatively plentiful
uranium ore, such as
carnotite and other uranium-bearing minerals, has
also been found. The purple, pink, blue, white, yellow, gray, and
red colored Chinle also contains shale, gypsum, limestone,
sandstone, and
quartz.
Iron,
manganese oxides
and
copper sulfide are often found
filling gaps between pebbles. Purplish slopes made of the Chinle
can be seen above the town of Rockville.
The sand,
gravel, and trees which made up
these deposits were later strongly cemented by dissolved
silica (probably from volcanic ash from the west) in
groundwater. Much of the bright
coloration of the Chinle is due to soil formation during the Late
Triassic. The lowermost member of the Chinle, the Shinarump,
consists of a white, gray, and brown
conglomerate made of coarse
sandstone, and thin lenses of sandy mudstone, along with plentiful
petrified wood. The Shinarump was laid down in braided streams that
flowed through valleys eroded into the underlying Moenkopi
Formation. This member of the Chinle forms prominent cliffs with
thickness up to , and its name comes from a
Native American word
meaning "wolf's rump" (a reference to the way this member erodes
into gray, rounded hills).
A succession of volcanic-ash-rich mudstone and sandstone with a
thickness of make up the Petrified Forest Member of the Chinle,
which was deposited by lakes, highly sinuous rivers and on the
surrounding floodplains.
This is the same bright, multicolored part of
the Chinle that is exposed in Petrified
Forest National Park
and the Painted Desert
. Petrified wood is, of course, also common
in this member.
Moenave and Kayenta formations (Lower Jurassic)
Early Jurassic uplift created an unconformity above the Chinle
Formation that represents about ten million years of missing
sedimentation between it and the next formation, the
Moenave. Periodic incursions of shallow
seas from the north during the Jurassic flooded parts of Wyoming,
Montana, and a northeast–southwest trending trough on the
Utah/Idaho border. The Moenave was deposited in a variety of river,
lake, and flood-plain environments.

Moenave Formation
The oldest beds of this formation belong to the Dinosaur Canyon
Member, a reddish, slope-forming rock layer with thin beds of
siltstone that are interbedded with mudstone and fine sandstone.
The Dinosaur Canyon, with a local thickness of , was probably laid
down in slow-moving streams, ponds and large lakes. Evidence for
this is in cross-bedding of the sediments and large numbers of fish
fossils.
The upper member of the Moenave is the pale reddish-brown with a
thickness of and cliff-forming Springdale Sandstone. It was
deposited in swifter, larger, and more voluminous streams than the
older Dinosaur Canyon Member. Fossils of large
sturgeon-like freshwater
fish
have been found in the beds of the Springdale Sandstone. The next
member in the Moenave Formation is the thin-bedded Whitmore Point,
which is made of mudstone and
shale. The lower
red cliffs visible from the Zion Human History Museum (until 2000
the Zion Canyon Visitor Center) are accessible examples of this
formation.

Kayenta Formation
At thick, the
Kayenta Formation's
sand and
silt were laid down in early
Jurassic time in slower-moving, intermittent
streambeds in a semiarid to
tropical
environment. Interbedded sandstone, basal conglomerates,
siltstones, mudstones, and thin cross-beds are typical channel and
floodplain deposits found in the Kayenta. Paleocurrent studies show
that the Kayenta rivers flowed in a general westward to
southwestward direction.
Fossilized
dinosaur footprints from
sauropods have been found in this formation
near the Left Fork of North Creek. Mountains in Nevada and
California continued to rise in the Lower Jurassic as plate motions
forced North Americanorthward. Eventually, this created a
rain shadow and brought widespread
desertification. Today the Kayenta is a red
and mauve rocky slope-former that can be seen throughout Zion
Canyon.
Navajo Formation (Lower to Mid Jurassic)

Navajo Formation
Approximately 190 to 136 million years ago in the
Jurassic the Colorado Plateau area's
climate increasingly became
arid
until 150,000 square miles (388,000 km²) of western
North America became a huge
desert, not unlike the modern
Sahara. For perhaps 10 million years sometime
around 175 million years ago
sand
dunes accumulated, reaching their greatest thickness in the
Zion Canyon area; about 2,200 feet (670 m) at the Temple
of Sinawava (
photo) in
Zion Canyon.
Most of
the sand, made of 98% translucent, rounded-grain quartz, was transported from coastal sand dunes to
the west, in what is now central Nevada
.
Today the
Navajo Sandstone is a
geographically widespread, pale tan to red cliff and
monolith former with very obvious sand dune
cross-bedding patterns (
photo). Typically
the lower part of this remarkably homogeneous formation is reddish
from
iron oxide that percolated from the
overlaying iron-rich Temple Cap formation while the upper part of
the formation is a pale tan to nearly white color. The other
component of the Navajo's weak
cement matrix
is
calcium carbonate, but the
resulting sandstone is friable (crumbles easily) and very porous.
Cross-bedding is especially evident in the eastern part of the park
where Jurassic wind directions changed often. The crosshatched
appearance of Checkerboard Mesa is a good example (
photo).
Springs, such as Weeping Rock (
photo), form in
canyon walls made of the porous Navajo Sandstone when water hits
and is channeled by the underlying non-porous Kayenta Formation.
The principal
aquifer in the region is
contained in Navajo Sandstone. Navajo is the most prominent
formation exposed in Zion Canyon with the highest exposures being
West Temple and Checkerboard Mesa. The monoliths in the sides of
Zion Canyon are among the tallest sandstone cliffs in the
world.
Temple Cap and Carmel formations (Middle Jurassic)
Utah and western Colorado were deformed as the rate of subduction
off the west coast increased in the Middle Jurassic
Sevier Orogeny. At the same time, an inland
sea began to encroach on the continent from the north. Broad tidal
flats and streams carrying iron oxide-rich mud formed on the
margins of the shallow sea to the west, creating the Sinawava
member of the
Temple Cap
Formation. Flat-bedded sandstones, siltstones, and limestones
filled depressions left in the underlying eroded strata. Streams
eroded the poorly cemented Navajo Sandstone, and water caused the
sand to slump.
Desert conditions returned briefly, creating the White Throne
member, but encroaching seas again beveled the coastline, forming a
regional unconformity. Thin beds of
clay and
silt mark the end of this formation. The most prominent outcrops of
this formation make up the capstone of West Temple in Zion Canyon.
Rain dissolves some of the iron oxide and thus streaks Zion's
cliffs red (the red streak seen on the Altar of Sacrifice is a
famous example). Temple Cap iron oxide is also the source of the
red-orange color of much the lower half of the Navajo
Formation.

Carmel Formation
A warm, shallow inland sea started to advance into the region
(transgress) 150 million years ago, finishing the job of
flattening the sand dunes. Limy ooze with some sand and fossils
were laid down as thick sedimentation beds from Mid to Late
Triassic time. Some calcareous silt percolated down into the buried
sand dunes (carrying red oxides with it) and eventually cemented
them into the sandstone of the Navajo Formation. The limy ooze
above would later lithify into the hard and compact limestone of
the
Carmel Formation, thick.
Many unique environments were created by the migrating Sevier
thrust system, and the four members of the Carmel Formation in
southwest Utah capture these changing environments. Both open
marine (
crinoids) and restricted marine
(
pelecypods,
gastropods) environments are represented in the
Co-op Creek member. Sandstone and gypsum in the Crystal Creek and
Paria River members signal a return to desert conditions in a
coastal setting.
Outcrops of the Carmel Formation are most notably exposed on Horse
Ranch Mountain (
photo) in the Kolob
Canyons section of the park and near Mt. Carmel Junction east of
the park. Other formations totaling thick may have been deposited
in the region during Late
Jurassic and
Early
Cretaceous only to be uplifted and
entirely removed by erosion.
Dakota Sandstone (Lower Cretaceous)

Dakota Sandstone
Mountains continued to rise in the Sevier orogenic belt to the west
during the
Cretaceous while the roughly
north-south trending Western Interior Basin expanded.
Rifting in the
Gulf of
Mexico
helped the southern end of the basin to subside,
which allowed marine water to advance northward. At the same
time, the shoreline advanced inland from the Arctic region.
The seas
advanced and retreated many times during the Cretaceous until one
of the most extensive interior seaways ever, called the Western Interior Seaway, drowned
much of western North America from the Gulf of Mexico to the
Arctic
Ocean
. The western shoreline of the seaway was in
the vicinity of Cedar
City, Utah
while the eastern margin was part of the low-lying,
stable platform ramp in Nebraska
and Kansas
.
The pebble to cobble
conglomerate and tan fossil-rich
sandstone of the resulting thick
Dakota
Sandstone include
alluvial fan and
alluvial plain sediments that grade
laterally into coastal plain, marginal marine, and marine deposits.
A small remnant of the Dakota is exposed on top of the -high Horse
Ranch Mountain (
photo). This formation is
the youngest one exposed in the Zion area but the oldest exposed in
Bryce Canyon to the northeast. Deposition continued but the
resulting formations were later uplifted and eroded away. The
exposed formations in
the Bryce Canyon area likely represent these lost layers.
Tectonic activity and erosion
Regional forces
East–west-directed compression from subduction off the west coast
affected the area in later Mesozoic and early
Tertiary time by folding and
thrust faulting strata. Evidence for the Sevier
Orogeny part of this period can be seen in the Taylor Creek area in
the Kolob section of the park. Chunks of Moenave strata have been
compressed to the point of thrusting themselves over the same
formation in the Taylor Creek Thrust Fault Zone, located on the
east flank of the Kanarra anticline.
Tensional
forces forming the Basin and Range
physiogeographic province to the west about 20 to 25 million
years ago in Tertiary time created the two fault that bound the Markagunt
Plateau
(which underlies the park): the Sevier Fault on the
east and the Hurricane Fault on the west. The Hurricane fault
zone is a major, active, steeply west-dipping normal fault that stretches at least
155 miles (250 km) from south of the Grand Canyon
northward to Cedar City,
Utah
. Along the southern boundary of the park,
tectonic displacement along this fault is about 3,600 ft
(1,098 m). Several other normal faults also developed on the
plateau.
Subsequent
uplift of the
Colorado Plateau and tilting of the
Markagunt Plateau started 13 million years ago. This steepened
the
stream gradient of the ancestral
Virgin River (Zion Canyon section of
the park), and Taylor and La Verkin creeks (Kolob Canyons section
of the park), causing them to flow and
downcut faster into the underlying Markagunt
Plateau. Downcutting continues to be especially rapid after heavy
rainstorms and winter runoff when the
water contains large amounts of suspended and abrasive sand grains.
Uplift
and downcutting are so fast that slot
canyons (very narrow river-cut features with vertical walls),
such as the Zion Narrows
, formed.
Volcanic activity
Explosive
andesitic volcanism dominated the
area to the west of Zion during
Oligocene
and early
Miocene time and probably
inundated the region with hundreds of feet of
welded tuff that has since eroded away. Three of
these tuff layers are preserved on top of Brainhead Peak. About
21 million years ago the Pine Valley
laccolith formed. This typical mushroom-shaped
laccolith is one of the largest intrusions of this type in the
world. Debris flows carried boulders of this intrusion onto the
Upper
Kolob Plateau indicating that
the Hurricane Cliffs could not have been present at the time.

Basalt flows on Hurricane Cliffs
Then from at least 1.4 million to 250,000 years ago in
Pleistocene time
basaltic lava flowed intermittently in the area,
taking advantage of uplift-created weaknesses in the
Earth's crust. Volcanic activity was concentrated
along the Hurricane Fault west of the park that today parallels
Interstate 15. Evidence of the
oldest flows can be seen at Lava Point and rocks from the youngest
are found at the lower end of Cave Valley. Some
cinder cones were constructed much later in the
southwest corner of the park.
Some of these lava flows blocked rivers and streams, impounding
small lakes and ephemeral ponds in the process. About
100,000 years ago, basalt from the largest
cinder cone in the park, Crater Hill, flowed
over the area.
The lava traveled into Coalpits and Scoggins
Washes to the south and accumulated to a depth of over 400 ft
(122 m) in the ancestral Virgin River valley near the
present-day ghost town of Grafton, Utah
. Water impounded behind the two blockages,
forming Coalpits Lake and Lake Grafton respectively.
Lake Grafton was the largest of at least 14 lakes that have
periodically formed in the park (most were from landslides; see
below). Thirteen lava flows are mapped in and near Zion dating from
1.5 million to 100,000 years ago.
More recent flows of
less than 10,000 years in age occurred north of Zion and east
of Cedar
Breaks National Monument
.
Erosion and canyon formation

Rockslide debris in Kolob
Canyons
Stream downcutting continued along with canyon-forming processes
such as
mass wasting; sediment-rich and
abrasive flood stage waters would undermine cliffs until vertical
slabs of rock sheared away. This process continues to be especially
efficient with the vertically jointed Navajo Sandstone.
All erosion types took advantage of preexisting weaknesses in the
rock such as rock type, amount of
lithification, and the presence of cracks or
joints in the rock. Basalt flows concentrated in valleys but
subsequent erosion removed sedimentary rock that once stood at
higher elevations. The resulting
inverted topography consists of ridges
capped by basalt which are separated by adjacent drainages.
In all about of sediment were removed from atop the youngest
exposed formation in the park (the Late Cretaceous-aged Dakota
Sandstone). The Virgin River carved out of sediment in about
1 million years.
This is a very high rate of downcutting,
about the same rate as occurred in Grand Canyon
during its most rapid period of erosion.
About 1 million years ago, Zion Canyon was only about half as
deep as it is today in the vicinity of Zion Lodge. Assuming that
erosion was fairly constant over the past 2 million years,
then the upper half of Zion Canyon was carved between about 1 and
2 million years ago and only the upper half of the Great White
Throne was exposed 1 million years ago and The Narrows were
yet to form.
Downcutting and canyon widening continue today as the process of
erosion continues to try to reduce the topography to sea level. In
1998 a flash flood temporarily increased the Virgin River's flow
rate from 200 to 4,500 ft³/s (6 to 125 m³/s).
Geologists estimate that the Virgin River
can cut another thousand feet (300 m) before it loses the
ability to transport sediment to the Colorado
River
to the south. However, additional uplift
will probably increase this figure.
Landslides and earthquakes

Sentinel Slide in Zion Canyon
Landslides more than once dammed the Virgin River and created lakes
where sediment accumulated. Every time the river eventually
breached the slide and drained the lake, leaving a flat-bottomed
valley. About 7,000 years ago, the
relatively thin wall between two closely spaced joints in the
Navajo Sandstone collapsed. The resulting Sand Bench landslide
blocked Zion Canyon just east of The Sentinel, creating Sentinel
Lake. Another notable stand was created about 4,000 years ago
when Sentinel Slide impounded the North Fork Virgin River, creating
a lake that backed up to Weeping Rock.
The current site of
Zion
Lodge
was under about of water for around
700 years. Evidence of valley floors created by these
lakes can be seen from Zion Canyon Scenic Drive south of Zion Lodge
near Sentinel Slide. Recent landslides in 1923, 1941, and 1995 have
temporarily dammed the Virgin River. Prior to the initial Sand
Bench landslide, the Virgin River flowed 70 ft (21 m)
lower in elevation than it does today.
The area is periodically rocked by mild to moderate
earthquakes, which often trigger
landslides. For example, on September 2, 1992 a
Richter Magnitude 5.8
earthquake caused 14 million cubic meters (18 million
cubic yards) of mostly Moenave Formation to slide downslope atop
the weak claystone of the Petrified Forest member of the Chinle
Formation. The quake was centered on the Washington Fault, about
southwest. Three houses and two water tanks were destroyed when the
slope they were built on dropped and extended laterally a similar
distance over a period of several hours.
The landslide is
visible just outside the park's entrance in Springdale,
Utah
.
Notes
References
- Harris 1997,
p. 34
- NPS
- Graham 2006,
p. 28
- Harris 1997,
p. 35
- GORP
- Graham 2006,
p. 29
- Harris 1997,
p. 38
- Graham 2006,
p. 30
- Harris 1997,
p. 33
- Harris 1997,
p. 40
- Graham 2006,
p. 31
- Harris 1997,
p. 41
- Harris 1997,
p. 42
- Corresponding to a rate of erosion of about 40 cm per
1,000 years (1.3 ft/1,000 yr)
- Harris 1997,
p. 31
Bibliography
- (public domain text)
- (public domain text)
External links