Pre-Mesozoic Palinspastic Reconstruction of the Eastern Great Basin (Western United States)
- 29 September 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 245 (4925) , 1454-1462
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.245.4925.1454
Abstract
The Great Basin of the western United States has proven important for studies of Proterozoic and Paleozoic geology [2500 to 245 million years ago (Ma)] and has been central to the development of ideas about the mechanics of crustal shortening and extension. An understanding of the deformational history of this region during Mesozoic and Cenozoic time (245 Ma to the present) is required for palinspastic reconstruction of now isolated exposures of older geology in order to place these in an appropriate regional geographic context. Considerable advances in unraveling both the crustal shortening that took place during Mesozoic to early Cenozoic time (especially from about 150 to 50 Ma) and the extension of the past 37 million years have shown that earlier reconstructions need to be revised significantly. A new reconstruction is developed for rocks of middle Proterozoic to Early Cambrian age based on evidence that total shortening by generally east-vergent thrusts and folds was at least 104 to 135 kilometers and that the Great Basin as a whole accommodated ∼250 kilometers of extension in the direction 287° ± 12° between the Colorado Plateau and the Sierra Nevada. Extension is assumed to be equivalent at all latitudes because available paleomagnetic evidence suggests that the Sierra Nevada experienced little or no rotation with respect to the extension direction since the late Mesozoic. An estimate of the uncertainty in the amount of extension obtained from geological and paleomagnetic uncertainties increases northward from ±56 kilometers at 36°30N to -87+108 kilometers at 40°N. On the basis of the reconstruction, the original width of the preserved part of the late Proterozoic and Early Cambrian basin was about 150 to 300 kilometers, about 60 percent of the present width, and the basin was oriented slightly more north-south with respect to present-day coordinates.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Subdivision of precambrian time: recommendations and suggestions by the subcommission on precambrian stratigraphyPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Basin and Range extensional tectonics at the latitude of Las Vegas, NevadaGSA Bulletin, 1988
- The regional tectonic setting and possible causes of Cenozoic extension in the North American CordilleraGeological Society, London, Special Publications, 1987
- Magnitude of crustal extension across the northern Basin and Range province: constraints from paleomagnetismEarth and Planetary Science Letters, 1985
- An early Cambrian rift to post-rift transition in the Cordillera of western North AmericaNature, 1985
- Paleomagnetic results from the Central Sierra Nevada: Constraints on reconstructions of the western United StatesTectonics, 1984
- The Basin and Range Province: Origin and Tectonic SignificanceAnnual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences, 1982
- Regional tilt patterns of late Cenozoic basin-range fault blocks, western United StatesGSA Bulletin, 1980
- Low-Angle (Denudation) Faults, Hinterland of the Sevier Orogenic Belt, Eastern Nevada and Western UtahGSA Bulletin, 1972
- Mantled Gneiss Domes in the Albion Range, Southern IdahoGSA Bulletin, 1968