NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Back to Results
Brittle extension of the continental crust along a rooted system of low-angle normal faults: Colorado River extensional corridorA transect across the 100 km wide Colorado River extensional corridor of mid-Tertiary age shows that the upper 10 to 15 km of crystalline crust extended along an imbricate system of brittle low-angle normal faults. The faults cut gently down a section in the NE-direction of tectonic transport from a headwall breakaway in the Old Woman Mountains, California. Successively higher allochthons above a basal detachment fault are futher displaced from the headwall, some as much as tens of kilometers. Allochthonous blocks are tilted toward the headwall as evidenced by the dip of the cappoing Tertiary strata and originally horizontal Proterozoic diabase sheets. On the down-dip side of the corridor in Arizona, the faults root under the unbroken Hualapai Mountains and the Colorado Plateau. Slip on faults at all exposed levels of the crust was unidirectional. Brittle thinning above these faults affected the entire upper crust, and wholly removed it locally along the central corridor or core complex region. Isostatic uplift exposed metamorphic core complexes in the domed footwall. These data support a model that the crust in California moved out from under Arizona along an asymmetric, rooted normal-slip shear system. Ductile deformation must have accompanied mid-Tertiary crustal extension at deeper structural levels in Arizona.
Document ID
19860021665
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
John, B. E.
(Geological Survey Menlo Park, CA, United States)
Howard, K. A.
(Geological Survey Menlo Park, CA, United States)
Date Acquired
August 12, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1985
Publication Information
Publication: Lunar and Planetary Inst. Papers Presented to the Conference on Heat and Detachment in Crustal Extension on Continents and Planets
Subject Category
Geophysics
Accession Number
86N31137
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
No Preview Available