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Miocene Crustal Extension in the Southern Death Valley Region. I. II. III. Introduction In southern Death Valley normal and strike-slip faulting associated with extensional basin formation began less than 15 Ma ago and continues today. Geologic features such as: granitic plutons, dikes, sills, and volcanic fields are concurrent with extension (Calzia et al., 2000). This presentation outlines crustal extension and it’s correlation to magmatism in the southern Death Valley. Location map. Figure 1. Figure 1. Lithological and location map of Southern Death Valley Region Wright et al., 1984. 1. Detailed mapping & dating of volcanic and plutonic rocks in the southwestern Great Basin indicate that maximum crustal extension, ascribable to the Basin and Range event, occurred at different places in different time intervals, and migrated westward. 2. K/Ar dating of volcanic rocks. Different times of westward extension Kingston Range: Extension ended prior to 14 mya (million years ago). Resting Springs Range: Tilting post-dates 12 myo(million year old) dacitic flows & predates 9 myo rhyolitic ash-flow tuff Greenwater Range/Black Mountains: volcanic and sedimentary units 9-8 myo dip >60 degrees where 4-5 myo basalt flows dip gently. IV. V. Geologic Setting. The southern Death Valley Region is bounded on the west by the Panamint Range and the south by the Providence Mountains and New York Mountains. See Figure 1. The pre-Cenozoic stratigraphy includes Early Proterozoic cratonic rocks and Middle Proterozoic to Paleozoic sedimentary deposits. The Pahrump Group, which is Middle Proterozoic, lies unconformably on the cratonic rocks and contains about 2100 meters. It consists of the Crystal Springs Formation, Beck Spring Dolomite, and Kingston Peak Formation. The Pahrump Group is overlain by 30005000 m of late Proterozoic and Paleozoic miogeoclinal deposits. The Crystal Springs is intruded by 1068 Ma and 1087 Ma diabase sills. Most of the Proterozoic and Paleozoic rocks are intruded by Mesozoic and Tertiary plutons. All of these rocks are unconformably overlain by later Tertiary sedimentary, volcanic rocks, and Quaternary alluvial deposits. Crustal Extension In the southern Death Valley region crustal extension is developed by a combination of listric faulting, planar normal faults, NW trending right lateral SS faults, and NE trending left lateral SS faults. The normal faults dip 50˚-30˚ W and flatten out at depths not to exceed 5 km. These depths suggest that the deposits are sliding off of cratonic rocks into Tertiary Basins formed during extension (Calzia et al., 2000). The faults are spread more apart in the deeper crust, 5 to 15 km, than they are in the shallow crust, less than 5 km. Estimates of the crustal extension in the SDV region range from 30-50%. The oldest Late Cenozoic extensional fault is the Kingston Range-Halloran Hills detachment fault system. It defines the east boundary of the Death Valley regime and is divided into northern and southern segments. A. The northern segment is the Kingston Range detachment fault. It dips as much as 15°W and separates the complexly faulted upper plates from the relatively unfaulted lower plates. Extensional faults in the upper plate of the Kingston Range detachment fault zone include NW trending planar and listric normal faults. As well as NE trending steep SS faults and oblique slip faults dipping to the SW. NE trending faults terminate at the detachment fault. Consistent tear faults indicate that the upper plate of the Kingston Range detachment fault were transported to the SW. That displacement increases SW as each generation of NW trending faults added its extension to the upper plate. Maximum horizontal displacement along the NE most faults is about 1-2 km and cumulative horizontal displacement in the upper plate is about 6 km. B. The southern segment is the Halloran Hills detachment fault which is discontinuously exposed along the west side of the Mesquite Mountains, Clark Mountains, and Mescal Range. This is best exposed at Mesquite Pass and the Mescal Range. Regional geologic relations show that rocks in the HW were transported 5-9 km to the SW during the last two phases of westward sliding. A graben in the HW consist of rock avalanche deposits and blocks cut by channel conglomerate. An allochthon of highly brecciated Paleozoic carbonate rocks are representative of this fault. Cross cutting relations suggest the allochthon was displaced approximately 1.5 km during at least two episodes of faulting. The extremely brittle character of the deformation suggest that the deformation took place during Cenozoic time. Cross cutting relations constrain the age of crustal extension in the SDV region. A. The Kingston Range cuts 16 Ma ash and is deformed by 12.4 Ma granite of Kingston Peak. B. 12.5 Ma syntectonic andesite flows are present in the upper plate of this detachment fault. C. The Halloran Hills detachment fault cuts a 13.4 Ma felsic sill. 13.1 Ma volcanic breccia was deposited on the subsiding HW of this fault. D. A low angle fault associated with the Halloran Hills fault cuts 13.2±.04 Ma latite in the NE Silurian Hills. Sub-horizontal basalt flows (K/Ar ages of 4.48 & 5.12 Ma) and the underformed Tacopa lake beds unconformably overlie east tilted strata related to crustal extension. Based on data the Tacopa lake beds may date back to 7 Ma indicating large scale crustal extension in the SDV region began south of the Kingston Range but north of the Mescal Range and Silurian Hills between 13.4 and 13.1 Ma and migrated northward with time. Extension stopped in this region between 5 and 7 Ma but continues west and north of the Death Valley graben to the present day.