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Structural and thermobarometric constraints on the exhumation of the northern Snake Range metamorphic core complex, Nevada

Posted on:2009-07-28Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of Southern CaliforniaCandidate:Cooper, Frances JacquelineFull Text:PDF
GTID:1440390005954175Subject:Geology
Abstract/Summary:
Observations from areas of large-scale continental extension, including the Basin and Range Province in western North America, have revealed the presence of regionally subhorizontal normal faults that appear to have exhumed rocks from mid- to lower-crustal levels. These detachment faults separate upper plate rocks extended on arrays of high-angle brittle normal faults from lower plate rocks exhibiting ductile mylonitic stretching and medium- to high-grade metamorphism. The origin and evolution of these detachments has been a matter of debate for decades, and yet a number of issues remain unresolved: (1) the dip of the faults when they were initiated and were active; (2) their penetration depth into the crust; (3) their role in exhuming high-grade metamorphic rocks; and (4) the origin and significance of the mylonitic deformation in their footwalls.;I explored these issues in the footwall to a classic detachment fault---the northern Snake Range decollement (NSRD) in eastern Nevada---using a combination of structural geology, geothermobarometry, paleomagnetism, isotope geochronology, and electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) analysis. Garnet-biotite-muscovite-plagioclase thermobarometry suggests that the footwall to the NSRD experienced late Cretaceous peak metamorphic conditions of 6--8 kbar and 500--650°C, equivalent to a burial depth of ≤ 30 km. Calcite-dolomite thermometry indicates that Tertiary mylonitic deformation occurred under lower temperature conditions of 350--430°C, equivalent to mid-crustal levels. Structural, paleomagnetic, and EBSD data demonstrate that mylonites experienced two phases of shear (top-east and top-west), inconsistent with movement along a single throughgoing normal fault.;I conclude that exhumation of the northern Snake Range footwall was a two-step process. Initial ductile stretching and thinning of the crust exhumed footwall rocks to the middle crust beneath a discontinuity, referred to as the localized-distributed transition (LDT), that separated extension along brittle normal faults above from localized ductile shear zones below. Mylonites formed along the LDT were subsequently captured by a moderately-dipping NSRD that soled into the middle crust. The NSRD, therefore, appears to be a late-stage brittle normal fault that was responsible for only about half the total exhumation of the footwall, and is not directly related to the mylonitic deformation.
Keywords/Search Tags:Northern snake range, Exhumation, Mylonitic deformation, Footwall, Metamorphic, Structural, NSRD
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