Abstract Strongly deformed footwall rocks exposed in metamorphic core complexes (MCC) of the North American Cordillera were exhumed via ductile attenuation, mylonitic shearing, and detachment faulting. Whether these structures accommodated diapiric upwelling or regional extension via low‐angle normal faulting is debated. The Ruby Mountains‐East Humboldt Range MCC, northeast Nevada, records top‐west normal‐sense exhumation of deformed Proterozoic‐Paleozoic stratigraphy and older basement. We conducted 1:24,000‐scale mapping of the southwestern East Humboldt Range, with integrated structural, geochemical, and geochronological analyses to characterize the geometry and kinematics of extension and exhumation of the mylonitized footwall. Bedrock stratigraphy is pervasively intruded by Cretaceous, Eocene, and Oligocene intrusions, but observations of a coherent stratigraphic section show >80% vertical attenuation of Neoproterozoic to Ordovician rocks. These rocks are penetratively sheared with top‐west kinematics. The shear zone thus experienced combined pure‐ and simple‐shear (i.e., general shear) strain. We argue that this shear zone was syn‐/post‐kinematic with respect to Oligocene plutonism because: (a) mylonitic shearing spatially corresponds with preceding Oligocene intrusions; (b) thermochronology reveals that the shear zone experienced substantial cooling and exhumation after Oligocene plutonism; and (c) the mylonites are crosscut by undated, but likely late Oligocene, leucogranite. We propose that Eocene mantle‐derived magmatism and thermal incubation led to Oligocene diapiric upwelling of the middle crust, with ductile stretching focused on the flanks of this upwarp. Regional Basin and Range extension initiated later in the middle Miocene. Therefore, the development of the East Humboldt Range shear zone was not driven by regional extension and coupled detachment faulting.
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Paleorelief and footwall rotation adjacent to the Wasatch Fault Zone recorded by the Eocene–Oligocene paleosurfaces, Snyderville Basin, Utah, U.S.A.
The Wasatch Fault Zone (WFZ) is a north–south striking, west-dipping extensional fault system that bounds the eastern margin of the Basin and Range Province. Fluid inclusion thermobarometry and paleosalinity horizons require 11 km of vertical offset across the WFZ and suggest 15–20o of eastward rotation of the WFZ footwall. A series of Eocene–Oligocene intrusive and volcanic rocks, the Wasatch Intrusive Belt (WIB), crop out in the Wasatch Mountains and Snyderville Basin in a now oblique upper-crustal section where the deepest rocks are adjacent to the WFZ and the Eocene paleosurfaces are located ~35 km east of the WFZ. Paleosurfaces include Keetley and Norwood volcanic deposits (part of the WIB) and Wasatch Fm. conglomerates sitting unconformably on Mesozoic and older rocks. It was unclear how the overall eastward rotation was recorded by the paleosurfaces, both locally and regionally, and how much paleorelief existed during the Eocene–Oligocene. These basal surfaces were digitized and analyzed in ArcGIS and Matlab to determine the magnitude and pattern of rotation recorded by the paleosurfaces and to create and refine a 3D model of exhumation within the Wasatch Mountains. The maximum rotation of an individual surface is 8o, and planar best fit of all surfaces is 2o. This mismatch between the fluid inclusion and geologic data suggests that distributed deformation, yet-to-be-identified structures, and/or paleorelief likely complicated the geologic record of footwall rotation. A three-dimensional pattern of exhumation suggests north–south variation in the magnitude of exhumation which decreases away from the latitude of the WIB. East–west variation in the rotation magnitude of the paleosurfaces could possibly owe to thermal buoyancy of the exhumed rocks near the WFZ. The pattern of exhumation, surface trace of the WFZ, pattern of modern relief, and emplacement history of the WIB are consistent with increased buoyancy in the central Wasatch Mountains and proximal to the WFZ due to the prolonged elevated geothermal gradient in the vicinity of the WIB. The WIB crops out in a high relief, topographically complex area, which combined with the footwall rotation, makes an exhumation map an invaluable tool for interpreting the thermal history of the magmatic rocks and contextualizing petrochronology data from the WIB.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1853496
- PAR ID:
- 10429182
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Transactions American Geophysical Union
- ISSN:
- 2379-6723
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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