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Structure of the central Death Valley pull-apart basin and vicinity from COCORP profiles in the southern Great Basin

Laura Serpa, Beatrice de Voogd, Lauren Wright, James Willemin, Jack Oliver, Ernest Hauser and Bennie W. Troxel
Structure of the central Death Valley pull-apart basin and vicinity from COCORP profiles in the southern Great Basin
Geological Society of America Bulletin (September 1988) 100 (9): 1437-1450

Abstract

COCORP deep seismic reflection profiles in the vicinity of the central Death Valley pull-apart basin in southeastern California provide three-dimensional information on the subsurface of an active extensional terrane. Variations in the orientation and density of reflectors indicate that the crust and upper mantle of the region is divisible into three seismic zones which may represent regions of differing lithology, rheology, or both. The reflections in the upper approximately 5 s (15 km) of the data have gentle to moderate dips; between 5 and 10 s, reflections are predominantly subhorizontal; and below approximately 10 s (30 km), there are no notable reflections. The boundaries between the above reflecting zones are marked by prominent reflecting horizons which are continuous throughout the survey region.The observed reflection geometries resemble those predicted by the crustal model of the region proposed by Wright and Troxel (1973) on the basis of geological studies. In addition, many of the upper-crustal reflectors can be traced directly to mapped features. Based on those correlations, the upper reflecting zone (0-5 s) is interpreted to be a region of brittle deformation with the various upper-crustal reflectors interpreted as faults and basin sediments. The reflecting horizon at the base of the upper zone appears to be the lower boundary of the faulted upper crustal blocks and, it has been suggested that it locally includes partially molten rock. The observed geometries and amplitudes of reflections from the lower crust (15-30 km depth or 5-10 s two-way traveltime) are consistent with the model of Wright and Troxel for a ductilely deformed and intruded lower crust. The prominent reflecting horizon at the base of that zone is designated the reflection Moho and the seismically transparent lowest zone appears to correspond to the upper mantle.The seismic data define a zone of faults (referred to here as the "Wingate Wash fault zone") which appears to form the southern boundary of the central Death Valley basin and also may have provided a conduit for the migration of magma from a mid-crustal magma body to the surface. The Wingate Wash fault zone appears to intersect the southern Death Valley fault zone and the frontal faults of the Black Mountains in the subsurface beneath the youngest volcanic edifice in the region. Those three fault zones appear to separate the Panamint, Owlshead, and Black Mountain upper-crustal fault blocks. From the available data, a reconstruction of the possible fault-block movements during the time of basin subsidence is presented. That reconstruction suggests that the central Death Valley basin formed as a result of the combined down-to-the-east rotation and northwest translation of the fault blocks in manner similar to that proposed by Reches for other parts of the Basin and Range.


ISSN: 0016-7606
EISSN: 1943-2674
Coden: BUGMAF
Serial Title: Geological Society of America Bulletin
Serial Volume: 100
Serial Issue: 9
Title: Structure of the central Death Valley pull-apart basin and vicinity from COCORP profiles in the southern Great Basin
Affiliation: Cornell Univ., Inst. Study Cont., Ithaca, NY, United States
Pages: 1437-1450
Published: 198809
Text Language: English
Publisher: Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
References: 59
Accession Number: 1988-062545
Categories: Structural geologyApplied geophysics
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Annotation: Cornell Univ., Dep. Geol. Sci., Contrib. No. 814
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 2 tables, block diags., geol. sketch map
N35°34'60" - N37°00'00", W117°30'00" - W116°15'00"
Secondary Affiliation: Pa. State Univ., USA, United StatesUniv. Calif., USA, United States
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2019, American Geosciences Institute.
Update Code: 1988

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