LATE PALEOZOIC FOLDING AND THRUST FAULTING IN THE NORTHERN HOT CREEK RANGE, NYE COUNTY, NEVADA
Two thrust faults, one east-directed and the other northwest-directed, place older Paleozoic rocks over Pennsylvanian rocks. Superposed mesoscopic folds indicate that east-directed thrusting was the earliest deformation event. F1 folds are related to the east-directed thrust; it places an Ordovician-Mississippian thrust plate over an unnamed Pennsylvanian limestone. F2 folds are related to a northwest-directed thrust that places Devonian Nevada Group over the same Pennsylvanian limestone. Low-angle extensional faults and high-angle normal faults complicate these map relationships.
The Ordovician-Mississippian thrust plate is unconformably overlain by an Early Triassic (Griesbachian) sandstone that also overlies the Pennsylvanian rocks of the footwall. This relationship requires pre-Early Triassic emplacement of the Ordovician-Mississippian thrust plate. The hinterland-directed thrust plate also appears to be unconformably overlain by the same Early Triassic sandstone, but critical contact relations are obscured by cover.
The existence of a mid-Mississippian (Osagean-Meramecian) limestone is unusual in this region. Rocks of that age in Nevada are usually siliciclastic or else they are nonexistent (i.e., represented by an unconformity). Mid-Mississippian deformation has been recently recognized throughout much of central Nevada.
A similar deformation history, consisting of foreland-vergent followed by hinterland-vergent folding and thrusting has been documented on the Nevada Test Site which lies ~200 km south of the northern Hot Creek Range.