The location of the Grouse Creek block has been determined at some points by determining the age when minerals were metamorphosed through isotopic analysis of uranium, strontium, neodymium and lead. The ages matched characteristic outcropping Archean orthogneisses. Outcrops have been sampled in the Pioneer Mountains, the Albion Range, the East Humboldt Range, and the Grouse Creek Range. Results indicate that while surface exposures of the Grouse Creek block are rare, the extent of the block is large, reaching from southern Idaho to northeastern Nevada and northwestern Utah. The boundaries of the block remain a topic of significant study.
History of study
Initial geochronology of the Grouse Creek block in 1967 provided age dates identical to those of the Wyoming craton, causing the margin between the two to be blurred. The Grouse Creek block was later proposed as a separate terrane following the discovery of outcropping 2.45 to 1.6 billion year old Paleoproterozoic metasedimentary rocks of the Farmington Canyon Complex in the Wasatch Range of Utah separating the block from the Wyoming craton. There is still debate as to whether the Grouse Creek block is distinct from the Wyoming Craton at depth. Geologists proposed three hypotheses for the provenance of the Grouse Creek block:
The Grouse Creek block could be an accreted Archean block.
It may be a re-accreted rifted fragment of the Wyoming craton.
Or the block could be a part of the Wyoming craton separated by a younger intracratonic rift.
Geo- and thermochronologic data indicates mountain building and magmatism in the Farmington Canyon Complex at 2.45 and 1.8 billion years ago can be attributed to accretion of the Grouse Creek block to the Wyoming craton in the Paleoproterozoic. The Wyoming craton can be differentiated from other Archean terranes by an enriched 207Pb/204Pb ratio that is hypothesized to represent early crustal extraction, as well as samarium and neodymium ratios providing rock ages of up to 4.0 Ga. Investigation of lead and neodymium isotope ratios in the Grouse Creek block provide evidence that it is chemically unique with respect to the Wyoming craton, corroborating past studies indicating the accretion of the terrane to the western margin of the Wyoming craton in the Paleoproterozoic.