THRUST FAULTING AND CHAOS STRUCTURE, SILURIAN HILLS, SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
1960; Geological Society of America; Volume: 71; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1130/0016-7606(1960)71[181
ISSN1943-2674
Autores Tópico(s)Geochemistry and Geologic Mapping
ResumoResearch Article| February 01, 1960 THRUST FAULTING AND CHAOS STRUCTURE, SILURIAN HILLS, SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY, CALIFORNIA DONALD H KUPFER DONALD H KUPFER GEOLOGY DEPARTMENT, LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY, BATON ROUGE, LA. Search for other works by this author on: GSW Google Scholar Author and Article Information DONALD H KUPFER GEOLOGY DEPARTMENT, LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY, BATON ROUGE, LA. Publisher: Geological Society of America Received: 17 Sep 1957 First Online: 02 Mar 2017 Online ISSN: 1943-2674 Print ISSN: 0016-7606 Copyright © 1960, The Geological Society of America, Inc. Copyright is not claimed on any material prepared by U.S. government employees within the scope of their employment. GSA Bulletin (1960) 71 (2): 181–214. https://doi.org/10.1130/0016-7606(1960)71[181:TFACSS]2.0.CO;2 Article history Received: 17 Sep 1957 First Online: 02 Mar 2017 Cite View This Citation Add to Citation Manager Share Icon Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn MailTo Tools Icon Tools Get Permissions Search Site Citation DONALD H KUPFER; THRUST FAULTING AND CHAOS STRUCTURE, SILURIAN HILLS, SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY, CALIFORNIA. GSA Bulletin 1960;; 71 (2): 181–214. doi: https://doi.org/10.1130/0016-7606(1960)71[181:TFACSS]2.0.CO;2 Download citation file: Ris (Zotero) Refmanager EasyBib Bookends Mendeley Papers EndNote RefWorks BibTex toolbar search Search Dropdown Menu toolbar search search input Search input auto suggest filter your search All ContentBy SocietyGSA Bulletin Search Advanced Search Abstract In the Silurian Hills, 15 miles southeast of Death Valley, California, the dominant structure is the Riggs thrust. Beneath the thrust older Precambrian metamorphic rocks are overlain by the later Precambrian Pahrump group. Above the thrust are Paleozoic(?) carbonate rocks (Riggs formation, provisional name) and Tertiary(?) rocks, in part sedimentary and in part volcanic. Unconformably on all these bedrock units are a monolithologic carbonate megabreccia, fan gravels of two ages, and several terrace gravels. The topography is controlled by lithology and structure, drainage is subsequent, and scarps are either erosional or fault line.The Pahrump group in the Silurian Hills is 11,000 feet thick and is subdivided into 35 mappable members, chiefly coarse clastic rocks derived from the south. Correlation with the three formations of the type Pahrump in the Kingston Range, 15 miles north, is uncertain.Granitic rocks of two or more ages intrude the Riggs and Pahrump rocks. Distinctive members of the Pahrump group can be traced from unmetamorphosed sedimentary rocks in the west to intensely feldspathized and metamorphosed rocks in the east. The older granitic rock is displaced by the Riggs thrust fault; the younger granitic rock is both localized by the fault and displaced by it. Most of the movement on the north-trending, high-angle faults is prethrust, but contemporaneous and post-thrust movement occurred.The Riggs thrust was apparently localized along the angular unconformity between the Riggs and Pahrump rocks. The thrust surface is anticlinal or dome-shaped, probably because of post-thrust warping. The thrust zone is a “chaos” similar to the type chaos, the Amargosa chaos described by Noble (particularly the Virgin Spring phase), except that it is composed chiefly of rocks from the footwall of the thrust instead of the plate. Detailed mapping of the chaos, possible because many of the members or beds in the Pahrump group are distinctive, shows that component fragments were carried southwestward as much as 2 miles from their original position in the autochthon and were piled up in an imbricate structure in which normal stratigraphic order is approximately maintained. The amount of movement was not determined, but the distribution of granitic rock in and under the plate suggests a minimum movement of 8 miles. A debris-flow megabreccia covers the eroded trace of the Riggs thrust fault. The Tertiary(?) volcanic rocks are folded and confined to the thrust plate, which suggests that the less intensely folded Riggs thrust is younger.Chaos structures may have formed by the imbrication and piling up of a whole series of very small thrust plates above an underlying block, which was being shortened under compression. A few strong, competent plates moved out several miles without being broken up appreciably, but most plates broke up into giant lenses and blocks that moved much shorter distances. The incompetent material was ground up and acted as a lubricant. The stratigraphic section, thus “skeletonized” and abbreviated into “chaos”, retained a crude stratigraphic order. This content is PDF only. Please click on the PDF icon to access. First Page Preview Close Modal You do not have access to this content, please speak to your institutional administrator if you feel you should have access.
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