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Alamo impact olistoliths in Antler orogenic foreland, Warm Springs-Milk Spring area, Hot Creek Range, central Nevada

Forrest G. Poole and Charles A. Sandberg
Alamo impact olistoliths in Antler orogenic foreland, Warm Springs-Milk Spring area, Hot Creek Range, central Nevada (in Unusual central Nevada geologic terranes produced by Late Devonian Antler Orogeny and Alamo Impact, Forrest G. Poole (editor) and Charles A. Sandberg (editor))
Special Paper - Geological Society of America (September 2015) 517

Abstract

The 45 km (super 2) map area is situated at the south end of the Hot Creek Range in central Nevada, approximately 16 km east of the buried leading edge of the Mississippian Roberts Mountains thrust. Three eastward-trending left-slip faults divide the area into four structural blocks. The southernmost block is occupied solely by upper Oligocene volcanic rocks. The narrow northernmost block, now occupied surficially by valley fill and volcanic rocks, represents the south end of the main part of the Hot Creek Range, from which the study area is offset. The middle two blocks display different aspects of the eastward-traveled outer crater rim created by the ca. 382 Ma (early Late Devonian, middle Frasnian) Alamo impact. The Alamo impact was produced by a 5-km-diameter bolide, most likely a comet, which excavated a transient submarine crater 44-65 km in diameter. Comparison of thin (8-12 m) Alamo Breccia deposits in the northern of the middle two blocks with a more easterly, thick (35-42 m) Alamo deposit in the main Hot Creek Range, 4 km north of the map area, suggests that these blocks traveled many kilometers eastward. The northern of the middle two blocks contains a large olistolith capped by the thin breccia, whereas the southern block contains a larger olistolith lacking an Alamo Breccia cap. Three Devonian pulses of the Antler orogeny are better documented in the chapter on the Bisoni-McKay area. Here, the first Antler pulse in latest Middle Devonian time is obscured within an approximately 9 m.y. hiatus enlarged by excavation of the Alamo impact crater. The second Antler pulse is recorded by the approximately 4 m.y. hiatus produced by the regional unconformity between the lower and upper members of the Woodruff Formation. The third Antler pulse is documented by an approximately 8 m.y. regional hiatus between the Mississippian Webb Formation and Upper Devonian Woodruff Formation. In previous papers, we had interpreted this pulse to initiate the Antler orogeny.


ISSN: 0072-1077
EISSN: 2331-219X
Coden: GSAPAZ
Serial Title: Special Paper - Geological Society of America
Serial Volume: 517
Title: Alamo impact olistoliths in Antler orogenic foreland, Warm Springs-Milk Spring area, Hot Creek Range, central Nevada
Title: Unusual central Nevada geologic terranes produced by Late Devonian Antler Orogeny and Alamo Impact
Author(s): Poole, Forrest G.Sandberg, Charles A.
Author(s): Poole, Forrest G.editor
Author(s): Sandberg, Charles A.editor
Affiliation: U. S. Geological Survey, Denver, CO, United States
Affiliation: U. S. Geological Survey, Denver, CO, United States
Published: 20150911
Text Language: English
Publisher: Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
References: 66
Accession Number: 2016-024723
Categories: Economic geology, general, depositsStratigraphy
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Annotation: Includes appendices
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 4 tables, geol. sketch maps
N35°00'00" - N42°00'00", W120°00'00" - W114°04'60"
Source Note: Online First
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
Update Code: 201613
Program Name: USGSOPNon-USGS publications with USGS authors

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