--> The Influence of Pre-Existing Structures on the Initiation of an Oblique Rift: the Cañones Fault Zone in North-Central New Mexico
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The Influence of Pre-Existing Structures on the Initiation of an Oblique Rift: the Cañones Previous HitFaultNext Hit Zone in North-Central New Mexico

Abstract

The earliest Previous HitfaultNext Hit in an intracontinental rift tells us a lot: when the rifting initiated, where the weak zone in the crust was, how the upper plate moved relative to the lower plate, etc. Here we present our field mapping results and discuss its implications on the tectonic model of the initiation of an oblique rift. The Cañones Previous HitfaultNext Hit zone in north-central New Mexico is a boundary between the Colorado Plateau to the west and the Rio Grande Rift to the east. Offsetting a 20-Ma basaltic dike and the Oligocene Ritito Conglomerate, it is one of the oldest faults in the western flank of Española Basin, Rio Grande Rift. It consists of a master Previous HitfaultNext Hit, the Cañones Previous HitFaultNext Hit (CF), a transfer Previous HitfaultNext Hit, the Las Minas Previous HitFaultNext Hit (LMF), and a family of synthetic and antithetic faults. The South CF is a SE-dipping high-angle normal Previous HitfaultNext Hit, striking ∼040°; the North CF, however, dips NW while strikes NE, too. The South and North CF have a similar arcuate trace while the near E-W-striking LMF connects them in the middle. Detailed mapping and Previous HitfaultNext Hit kinematic studies from the slickenlines on Previous HitfaultNext Hit surfaces reveal that the relative movement orientations on the Cañones Previous HitFaultNext Hit range 070°∼130°, and average 100°, and thus characterized an oblique rift. The LMF is a left-lateral strike-slip Previous HitfaultNext Hit, based on the sub-horizontal slickenlines, and hence accommodated the movement on the hanging-wall blocks of both South and North CF. A noteworthy phenomenon along the Cañones Previous HitfaultNext Hit zone is that both South and North CF juxtapose a monocline in the hanging-wall block upon the sub-horizontal footwall strata. The monoclines are shortening structures, probably formed during the Laramide Orogeny. A series of right-stepping, en echelon thrusts and uplifts are preserved adjacent to our study area. Along the South CF, a monocline locates to the east of the Previous HitfaultNext Hit and is west vergent; along the North CF, in contrast, the other monocline locates to the west of the Previous HitfaultNext Hit and is east vergent. The polarity switch of the monoclines is consistent spatially with the dip direction change of the Cañones Previous HitFaultTop. We also observed three reverse faults and two reactivated normal faults on one outcrop. Our model suggests that after the Laramide shortening weakened the core of monoclines, the following Rio Grande Rift extension initiated obliquely along these weak zones. Therefore, the pre-existing shortening structures strongly influenced the structure of the rift-bounding faults when the extension initiated.