The western Nevada segments of the COCORP 40°N deep seismic-reflection survey of the North American Cordillera reveal the geometry of structures of Cenozoic and possibly earlier ages to travel-times of > 10 s, corresponding to depths of >30 km. The most striking feature of the data is a band of prominent reflections, typically at traveltimes of 9.5 to 10.5 s, that are present discontinuously across the entire data set. Few reflections are observed from beneath the base of this reflective zone, which is interpreted as the crust-mantle transition. This “reflection Mono” is inferred to be continuous across the survey area, varying gradually in depth but without resolvable offsets. It appears to have taken its present form or position during basin-range crustal extension. The middle to lower crust in much of the survey area is characterized by discontinuous reflections that are typically subhorizontal and locally dip gently west. These reflections may represent intrusions or shear zones related to basin-range or pre-basin-range extension, but some are likely to be inherited from earlier compressional deformation. Reflections from the upper crust are interpreted as images of basin-fill strata, basin-range normal faults, and Mesozoic and Paleozoic thrusts related to back-arc thrusting and accretion of oceanic and arc-related rocks.

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First page of Crustal structure of western Nevada from COCORP deep seismic-reflection data
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