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Stress field rotation or block rotation: An example from the Lake Mead fault systemThe Coulomb criterion, as applied by Anderson (1951), has been widely used as the basis for inferring paleostresses from in situ fault slip data, assuming that faults are optimally oriented relative to the tectonic stress direction. Consequently if stress direction is fixed during deformation so must be the faults. Freund (1974) has shown that faults, when arranged in sets, must generally rotate as they slip. Nur et al., (1986) showed how sufficiently large rotations require the development of new sets of faults which are more favorably oriented to the principal direction of stress. This leads to the appearance of multiple fault sets in which older faults are offset by younger ones, both having the same sense of slip. Consequently correct paleostress analysis must include the possible effect of fault and material rotation, in addition to stress field rotation. The combined effects of stress field rotation and material rotation were investigated in the Lake Meade Fault System (LMFS) especially in the Hoover Dam area. Fault inversion results imply an apparent 60 degrees clockwise (CW) rotation of the stress field since mid-Miocene time. In contrast structural data from the rest of the Great Basin suggest only a 30 degrees CW stress field rotation. By incorporating paleomagnetic and seismic evidence, the 30 degrees discrepancy can be neatly resolved. Based on paleomagnetic declination anomalies, it is inferred that slip on NW trending right lateral faults caused a local 30 degrees counter-clockwise (CCW) rotation of blocks and faults in the Lake Mead area. Consequently the inferred 60 degrees CW rotation of the stress field in the LMFS consists of an actual 30 degrees CW rotation of the stress field (as for the entire Great Basin) plus a local 30 degrees CCW material rotation of the LMFS fault blocks.
Document ID
19910005355
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Other
Authors
Ron, Hagai
(Institute for Petroleum Research and Geophysics Holon (Israel)., United States)
Nur, Amos
(Stanford Univ. CA., United States)
Aydin, Atilla
(Purdue Univ. West Lafayette, IN., United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
February 28, 1990
Publication Information
Publication: Reports on Block Rotations, Dault Domains and Crustal Deformation
Subject Category
Geophysics
Accession Number
91N14668
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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