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Cave Canyon Fault

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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 July 2001
GSA Bulletin (2001) 113 (7): 895–907.
...Mark H. Anders; Nicholas Christie-Blick; Stewart Wills; Scot W. Krueger Abstract The Cave Canyon detachment, a low-angle normal fault that crops out in the Mineral Mountains, west-central Utah, has been interpreted as a hanging-wall splay of a much larger structure (the Sevier Desert detachment...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Rock deformation studies in the Mineral Mountains ...
Second thumbnail for: Rock deformation studies in the Mineral Mountains ...
Third thumbnail for: Rock deformation studies in the Mineral Mountains ...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 June 1992
AAPG Bulletin (1992) 76 (6): 851–863.
..., and the extensive faulting in Railroad Valley. The weaker response observed at Cave Canyon may reflect the lack of faulting and the retention of light hydrocarbons in the reservoir. Another possible reason for weak response is that the available plant species at Cave Canyon do not exhibit the effect at the lower...
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First thumbnail for: The Potential Use of Biogeochemistry in the Detect...
Second thumbnail for: The Potential Use of Biogeochemistry in the Detect...
Third thumbnail for: The Potential Use of Biogeochemistry in the Detect...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 06 July 2017
GSA Bulletin (2017) 129 (11-12): 1636–1659.
... at the eastern margin of the study area and disconnecting the far-field groundwater flow. This was followed by subsiding groundwater levels and associated dewatering of the caves. Fault escarpments and canyon downcutting then dissected the caves, forming the present entrances. The caves are currently mostly dry...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Hypogenic karst at the Arabian platform margins: I...
Second thumbnail for: Hypogenic karst at the Arabian platform margins: I...
Third thumbnail for: Hypogenic karst at the Arabian platform margins: I...
Image
(A) View of Algerita Escarpment with key stratigraphic elements in the area of Lawyer Canyon. Total section exposed is 1640 ft (500 m), with upper approximately 1300 ft (400 m) representing the San Andres Formation (Fm.). (B) Light detection and ranging image viewed perpendicular to depositional dip showing true-scale shelf-to-basin clinoform pattern and key stratigraphic units of the north wall of McKittrick Canyon. (C) Geologic interpretation of north wall of Rattlesnake Canyon showing peritidal shelf crest (tan), sandstone (yellow), foreshore/upper shoreface grainstone (red), shallow-subtidal open shelf (green), reefal boundstone (purple), and slope (blue) deposits. Numbers G24, G25, G26, G27, and G28 are for the mapped high-frequency sequences. Note major fault traces and offset of units within Cave Graben. (D) Shaded elevation model showing key stratigraphic horizons—Yates (Corral, Hairpin, Triplet) and Tansill (Ocotillo) tops in three dimensions. Fracture and fault trends that parallel the shelf margin trend of the Capitan escarpment are highlighted with the landward (blue) and seaward (red) traces of the Cave Graben system. These northeast-oriented faults are important in controlling the position of the passages within Carlsbad Cavern. equiv = equivalent; Guad. = Guadalupe; HFS = high-frequency sequence; L. = Lower; MFS = maximum flooding surface; U. = Upper; YESO = Yeso Formation.
Published: 01 April 2017
-subtidal open shelf (green), reefal boundstone (purple), and slope (blue) deposits. Numbers G24, G25, G26, G27, and G28 are for the mapped high-frequency sequences. Note major fault traces and offset of units within Cave Graben. (D) Shaded elevation model showing key stratigraphic horizons—Yates (Corral
Image
Cave entrances in relation to geological setting and truncation. (A) Chariton Cave in horizontal bedding with three elliptical passages truncated by stream and slope erosion. Figure width 20 m. (B) Cave entrances truncated by a small canyon in eastern Ramallah monocline: A’rak Na’asane (left) and A’rak Abu Ktei (right). Figure width 500 m. (C) Hameraglim Cave truncated by the normal fault escarpment of the Dead Sea rift west of Jericho (seen in foreground). Figure width 800 m. (D) Hameraglim Cave map showing 16 entrances (E) of the maze truncated by the escarpment. (E) Close-up view of the central entrances of Hameraglim Cave. Figure width 30 m.
Published: 06 July 2017
Figure 4. Cave entrances in relation to geological setting and truncation. (A) Chariton Cave in horizontal bedding with three elliptical passages truncated by stream and slope erosion. Figure width 20 m. (B) Cave entrances truncated by a small canyon in eastern Ramallah monocline: A’rak Na’asane
Journal Article
Journal: Geophysics
Published: 03 June 2011
Geophysics (2011) 76 (4): B127–B137.
... faults and cave walls may contribute to the reflection, V-shaped bright spots probably were caused primarily by inclined and thinning cave sediment against the faults and cave wall. These bright spots, commonly present beneath fluvial canyons and channels on the unconformity surface, probably are related...
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First thumbnail for: Characterizing seismic bright spots in deeply buri...
Second thumbnail for: Characterizing seismic bright spots in deeply buri...
Third thumbnail for: Characterizing seismic bright spots in deeply buri...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 December 2011
AAPG Bulletin (2011) 95 (12): 2061–2083.
... by the observation that surface canyons appear to initiate in areas associated with intense sinkhole development. Also, surface river valleys tend to correspond to dip-oriented surface depressions partly related to near-surface cave collapse. During burial into the deeper subsurface, the combination of intrastratal...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Three-dimensional seismic geomorphology and analys...
Second thumbnail for: Three-dimensional seismic geomorphology and analys...
Third thumbnail for: Three-dimensional seismic geomorphology and analys...
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Figure 2. Polished blocks (standard thin-section size) from profile across Cave Canyon detachment, Mineral Mountains, arranged according to sampling distance from fault surface. (A) Samples from footwall granite (Miocene). (B) Samples from partially dolomitized limestone (upper Paleozoic) of hanging wall
Published: 01 July 2001
Figure 2. Polished blocks (standard thin-section size) from profile across Cave Canyon detachment, Mineral Mountains, arranged according to sampling distance from fault surface. (A) Samples from footwall granite (Miocene). (B) Samples from partially dolomitized limestone (upper Paleozoic
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 April 1989
Economic Geology (1989) 84 (2): 279–290.
... in the breccia zone. Initially, jasperoids formed along the faults, but later hydrothermal pulses introduced gold, silica, and fluorine into both the early jasperoids and the unconsolidated cave-fill sediments to form the orebody. Continued solution-related brecciation chaotically disrupted the gold deposit.Gold...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1959
AAPG Bulletin (1959) 43 (1): 256.
... faults cross or border the basin. Recent movements have occurred along the Manix fault zone and the Cave (Afton) Canyon fault system. The latter caused damming of the Pleistocene Mojave River and formed the several stages of Lake Manix and possibly earlier pluvial lakes. Hydrocarbons are found in minute...
Image
Aerial photograph of Slaughter Canyon and stereonets showing the location and orientation of 22 fault zones and 13 major fractures studied to date. Location of outcrop windows studied in detail is indicated. From north to south these are as follows: Pyramid, North-West (NW), North-East (NE), West (W), East (E), South-West (SW), South-East (SE), Ogle Cave (OC). Faults and fractures have consistent orientation and trend parallel to the Capitan reef platform margin (53–233°; Fig. 1A). Yates 4 platform margin marks the point from which distances are measured to faults and fractures.
Published: 01 January 2006
Figure 2 Aerial photograph of Slaughter Canyon and stereonets showing the location and orientation of 22 fault zones and 13 major fractures studied to date. Location of outcrop windows studied in detail is indicated. From north to south these are as follows: Pyramid, North-West (NW), North-East
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 13 May 2025
Economic Geology (2025)
... petrographic, geochemical, and geochronologic data from mineralized lacustrine strata of the Cave Spring formation and underlying volcanic rocks to assess the source-to-sink evolution of Li-B enrichment at Rhyolite Ridge. The Rhyolite Ridge and Argentite Canyon formations (ca. 6.1–5.8 Ma) consist...
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First thumbnail for: Source-to-Sink Evolution of Volcano-Sedimentary Li...
Second thumbnail for: Source-to-Sink Evolution of Volcano-Sedimentary Li...
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... faults. Other extensional fractures and some normal faults are found in the crests of the larger anticlines; such fractures are locally important guides of groundwater flow. The method of segment analysis has been applied in the North Canyon and associated passages of Snedegar's Cave by Jameson (1985...
Journal Article
Published: 29 October 2018
Journal of Foraminiferal Research (2018) 48 (4): 356–372.
... study shows that despite problems in well cuttings (cavings, inconsistent sampling) and complications in regional salt and fault tectonics, well transects can provide coherent benthic foraminiferal biofacies patterns that reveal paleobathymetric and paleoenvironmental changes in the Gulf of Mexico...
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First thumbnail for: Neogene Benthic Foraminiferal Biofacies, Paleobath...
Second thumbnail for: Neogene Benthic Foraminiferal Biofacies, Paleobath...
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Image
Sierra Nevada geographic reference map with generalized geology adapted from Jennings (2010). Faults: BMfz—Bear Mountains fault zone; KCfs—Kern Canyon fault system; Mfz—Melones fault zone; SCsz—Sierra Crest shear zone. Ophiolite assemblages: BOM—Bear Mountains ophiolitic mélange; KRO—Kings River ophiolite; KSM—Kaweah serpentinite mélange; TOM—Tuolumne ophiolitic mélange. Pendants: BC—Boyden Cave; FG—Fine Gold intrusive suite area; FP—Fairview; GP—Goddard pendant; IM—Iron Mountain; IP—Isabella; LK—Lake Kaweah; KR—Lower Kings River; MK—Mineral King; MP—Mount Pinchot; RRP—Ritter Range; SL—Snow Lake; SLP—Saddlebag Lake; SP—Sequoia Park; TR—Lower Tule River.
Published: 30 August 2021
Figure 1. Sierra Nevada geographic reference map with generalized geology adapted from Jennings (2010) . Faults: BMfz—Bear Mountains fault zone; KCfs—Kern Canyon fault system; Mfz—Melones fault zone; SCsz—Sierra Crest shear zone. Ophiolite assemblages: BOM—Bear Mountains ophiolitic mélange; KRO
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1895
GSA Bulletin (1895) 7 (1): 67–95.
...J. W. Spencer, D.Ph. F. G. S. Abstract Introduction. In Cuba there are mountains higher than any on the eastern side of North America; extensive plains as level as those of the Atlantic coast ; valleys formed at the baselevel of erosion, and deep canyons carved out by the youngest streams...
Image
Figure 5. Photomicrographs from hanging wall of Cave Canyon detachment. All samples are from the same partially dolomitized limestone. Scale bar is 0.4 mm in each case. (A) Sample from 15 m above the fault. Little-deformed ooids, fossils, and fossil fragments are observed. Note several fractures with minor offset, and evidence for static recrystallization. (B) Sample from 9 m above the fault. Note calcite twins with preferred orientation, abundant through-going fractures, and minor breakage of larger grains. (C) Sample from 2 m above the fault. Undulatory extinction is present in all calcite grains. About 30% of grains exhibit lobate boundaries. Note mixture of grain sizes. (D) Sample from 10 cm above fault. The sample is completely recrystallized. Lobate boundaries indicate dynamic recrystallization
Published: 01 July 2001
Figure 5. Photomicrographs from hanging wall of Cave Canyon detachment. All samples are from the same partially dolomitized limestone. Scale bar is 0.4 mm in each case. (A) Sample from 15 m above the fault. Little-deformed ooids, fossils, and fossil fragments are observed. Note several fractures
Image
Central and southern Sierra Nevada batholith with host rock pendants and approximate location of the Mojave–Snow Lake fault (MSLF), which is offset by the proto–Kern Canyon shear zone (modified after Greene and Schweickert, 1995; Bateman, 1992). Inset shows outline of Sierra Nevada batholith in California and location of the Tuolumne intrusion as reference. Mojave–Snow Lake fault is Kistler's (1993) intrabatholithic break 2 (IBB2). Abbreviations: BC—Boyden Cave pendant, BL—Benson Lake pendant, MG—Mount Goddard pendant, MK—Mineral King pendant, ML—May Lake pendant, MM—Mount Morrison pendant, RR—Ritter Range pendant, SL—Saddlebag Lake pendant, SM—Strawberry Tungsten Mine pendant, SN—Snow Lake pendant, TB—Tuolumne batholith.
Published: 01 October 2010
Figure 1. Central and southern Sierra Nevada batholith with host rock pendants and approximate location of the Mojave–Snow Lake fault (MSLF), which is offset by the proto–Kern Canyon shear zone (modified after Greene and Schweickert, 1995 ; Bateman, 1992 ). Inset shows outline of Sierra Nevada
Image
Figure 3. Photomicrographs from footwall of Cave Canyon detachment. Scale bar is 0.4 mm in A to C, and 0.8 mm in D. (A) Little-deformed granite, 500 m below fault contact. Fluid-inclusion trails correspond with individual microfractures. (B) Sample 12 m below fault contact. This example is typical of samples between 12 and 44 m from the fault. The percentage of intact islands seen in this photomicrograph is greatly reduced from 100 m below the contact where islands first become prominent. Grains within surviving islands become intensely microfractured and crisscrossed by hematite-filled veins. (C) Sample typical of those from between 5 and 2 m below fault. The island structure has disappeared, leaving shattered and broken grains. The grain size is greatly decreased from that of protolith at 500 m. (D) Sample from 10 cm below fault. Large second-stage quartz grain with halo of sericite (?). Embayment indicates grain growth at expense of matrix
Published: 01 July 2001
Figure 3. Photomicrographs from footwall of Cave Canyon detachment. Scale bar is 0.4 mm in A to C, and 0.8 mm in D. (A) Little-deformed granite, 500 m below fault contact. Fluid-inclusion trails correspond with individual microfractures. (B) Sample 12 m below fault contact. This example is typical
Journal Article
Journal: Geosphere
Published: 01 October 2021
Geosphere (2021) 17 (6): 1715–1744.
... Creek canyon at a peculiar T intersection, which is uncharacteristic of tributary intersections within Grand Canyon and occurs only when the intersecting tributary is localized along a fault. However, there are no fault trends along the valley on the north side of Cogswell Butte. Figure 2...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Realignments of the Colorado River by ∼2 m.y. of r...
Second thumbnail for: Realignments of the Colorado River by ∼2 m.y. of r...
Third thumbnail for: Realignments of the Colorado River by ∼2 m.y. of r...