The erosion factor in the emplacement of the Keystone thrust sheet (South East Nevada) across a land surface
- 1 May 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Geological Magazine
- Vol. 118 (5) , 501-507
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0016756800032854
Abstract
Summary: The Keystone/Muddy Mountain thrust of South East Nevada provides a spectacular example of a thrust sheet that has travelled across the earth's surface for a distance of at least 25 km, probably as much as 50 km. Along the thrust a Palaeozoic to early Mesozoic succession (> 4 km thick) has moved over a channelled erosion surface cut into Jurassic aeolian sandstone. Clasts in the channels are stratified, with those in upper layers being easily matched with the rocks in the thrust sheet – thus the clasts ‘herald’ the approach of the sheet. The clasts are only weakly deformed by the thrusting which belongs to the Sevier-Laramide orogeny.Erosion appears to be a significant if not crucial factor in the emplacement of the Keystone thrust sheet. Adopting an erosion rate of 1 mm/a (in accord with Alpine and Himalayan estimates) and a rate of thrusting of 5 mm/a (in accord with estimates from the Canadian Rockies) it follows that the thrust sheet was ‘half-eroded’ after travelling about 25 km.It is concluded that large displacement (i.e. > 25 km) may be impossible without erosion and one of two ‘erosion models’ would greatly facilitate transport up to 50 km, which is the likely maximum displacement.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Tectonic significance of the young mineral dates and the rates of cooling and uplift in the HimalayaTectonophysics, 1980
- Contemporary uplift and erosion of the Southern Alps, New Zealand: SummaryGSA Bulletin, 1980
- A Discussion on natural strain and geological structure - The energy balance and deformation mechanisms of thrust sheetsPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1976
- Relations between the Keystone and Red Spring Thrust Faults, Eastern Spring Mountains, NevadaGSA Bulletin, 1973
- Denudation rate in the Alps from geochronologic and heat flow dataAmerican Journal of Science, 1969
- Tectonic Development of Idaho-Wyoming Thrust BeltAAPG Bulletin, 1965
- Effect of the Toe in the Mechanics of Overthrust FaultingGSA Bulletin, 1963
- Some Rates of Regional ErosionThe Journal of Geology, 1961
- DISTRIBUTION OF MOUNTAIN BUILDING IN GEOLOGIC TIMEGSA Bulletin, 1949
- Structural Studies in Southern Nevada and Western ArizonaGSA Bulletin, 1926