Pa. Armstrong et Jm. Bartley, DISPLACEMENT AND DEFORMATION ASSOCIATED WITH A LATERAL THRUST TERMINATION, SOUTHERN GOLDEN-GATE RANGE, SOUTHERN NEVADA, USA, Journal of structural geology, 15(6), 1993, pp. 721-735
The Golden Gate thrust offers an excellent opportunity to study displa
cement and deformation at a lateral thrust tip. Slip across this E-ver
gent thrust is uniformly about 2.4 km for the southern 2 km of exposed
strike length and dies out to zero in the northern 5 km. Constant dis
placement and uniform hangingwall structure along the southern one-thi
rd of exposed strike length suggest that along-strike displacement var
iation and consequent deformation are localized near the lateral tip.
Structures located at and north of the lateral tip are consistent with
transpression and later uplift as slip accumulated on the thrust. Fol
d and fault orientations and calcite twinning strain record possible t
ranspression north of the lateral tip. E-W-striking normal faults at t
he thrust tip record extension that is interpreted to be the result of
the uplift and translation of a structurally continuous, rigid block
located north of the normal faults. This block is connected to and was
uplifted with the crest of the hangingwall anticline, and was separat
ed by the normal faults from thrust-related folding to the south. The
main hangingwall structure is an anticline that in southern exposures
trends N-S parallel to the thrust but bends westward and opens into a
box fold to the north. The hangingwall anticline superficially resembl
es a classic fault-propagation fold formed by a migrating ductile bead
. However, we are forced to reject the ductile bead hypothesis for the
fold because: (1) the geometry of the hangingwall anticline far from
the thrust tip cannot have evolved from the geometry at the thrust tip
; and (2) twinned calcite strain data from along the thrust suggest th
at strain was homogeneous and coaxial rather than inhomogeneous and pr
ogressively non-coaxial as predicted for a migrating ductile bead. The
three-dimensional structural and kinematic relations at the lateral t
ip of the Golden Gate thrust appear to be the result of deformation ar
ound a pinned tip, although the reason that the tip was pinned at its
present location is unclear. We interpret the thrust to have propagate
d relatively quickly to its ultimate extent with little initial displa
cement, indicating that it was easier to fault the rocks than to fold
them.