The Snake Range Décollement interpreted as a major extensional shear zone
- 1 November 1984
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Tectonics
- Vol. 3 (6) , 647-657
- https://doi.org/10.1029/tc003i006p00647
Abstract
Geological and geophysical constraints suggest that the Snake Range décollement of east‐central Nevada is a major Tertiary low‐angle normal fault zone. This interpretation is consistent with all existing data, and alleviates problems that result if large displacement across the décollement is excluded [Miller et al., 1983]. Based on published surface geology and COCORP seismic reflection profiling, we have constructed cross sections that suggest approximately 60 km of normal displacement on the décollement. Advantages of this interpretation over models that exclude large displacement are that it provides for overburden consistent with kyanite‐grade metamorphism of footwall rocks, predicts reasonable crustal thicknesses before and after extension without invoking unexposed mantle‐derived Tertiary intrusions at depth, and explains contrasting metamorphism and structural styles of hanging wall and footwall without requiring an extreme geothermal gradient during regional metamorphism and extensional strain. The present domal shape of the décollement is interpreted to result at least partly from reverse drag above an underlying, younger detachment related to much of the extension in ranges to the west of the Snake Range.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Rheological evidence for changes in the deformation mechanism of Solenhofen limestone towards low stressesPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- The Snake Range Décollement: An exhumed Mid‐Tertiary ductile‐brittle transitionTectonics, 1983
- Shear-zone model for the origin of metamorphic core complexesGeology, 1983
- Cordilleran Metamorphic Core Complexes -- From Arizona to Southern CanadaAnnual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences, 1982
- Low-angle normal faults in the Basin and Range Province: nappe tectonics in an extending orogenNature, 1981
- Metamorphic bathozones and bathograds; a measure of the depth of post-metamorphic uplift and erosion on the regional scaleAmerican Journal of Science, 1978
- A Discussion on volcanism and the structure of the Earth - Cenozoic volcanism and plate-tectonic evolution of the Western United States. I. Early and middle cenozoicPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1972
- Low-Angle (Denudation) Faults, Hinterland of the Sevier Orogenic Belt, Eastern Nevada and Western UtahGSA Bulletin, 1972
- Nomenclature and Correlation of Some Upper Precambrian and Basal Cambrian Sequences in Western Utah and Southeastern IdahoGSA Bulletin, 1971
- Cordilleran infrastructure in the eastern Great BasinAmerican Journal of Science, 1966