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Clockwise rotation of the western Mojave DesertA study of paleomagnetic data from Miocene volcanic rocks in the western Mojave Desert, which suggests about 25 deg of clockwise rotation, is presented. A total of 166 oriented core samples of two types of basalt were taken from 19 sites in the region. After demagnetization to 40 or 60 mT, application of structural corrections, and inversion of reversed sites, the data yielded an average direction of 51.6 deg inclination and 15.6 deg declination. When compared with the expected direction for Miocene rocks for stable North America, the direction for these Mojave rocks shows a clockwise rotation of 23.8 deg + or - 11.3 deg and a flattening of about 2.1 deg, a rotation which agrees in direction with oroclinal bending of the southern Sierra Nevada due to right-lateral shear along the western margin of North America. Most of this rotation is constrained by other paleomagnetic and strucural information to have occurred soon after the sampled basalts were deposited (about 20 Ma) and before about 16 Ma. These clockwise declination anomalies indicate that any subsequent counterclockwise rotation is small and/or compensated by previous clockwise rotation.
Document ID
19880053547
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Golombek, Matthew P.
(California Institute of Technology Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, United States)
Brown, Laurie L.
(Massachusetts, University Amherst, United States)
Date Acquired
August 13, 2013
Publication Date
February 1, 1988
Publication Information
Publication: Geology
Volume: 16
ISSN: 0091-7613
Subject Category
Geophysics
Accession Number
88A40774
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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