STRUCTURAL STYLE AND MAGNITUDE OF EXTENSION AT THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF THE COLORADO PLATEAU IN NORTHWESTERN ARIZONA
To show the changes in structural style, existing maps were compiled and a series of seven cross-sections were drawn based on these maps. The cross-sections are drawn perpendicular to the major Plateau-bounding faults at a scale of 1:48,000, covering the transition from the Colorado Plateau to the Basin and Range. To quantify the magnitude of extension, a fault budget was completed for each cross-section line. The fault budgets list the orientation and offset of all mapped faults. The cross-sections and fault budgets are utilized to compare the two main fault systems and shed light on the nature of the transition between the two.
Initial results show that the Colorado Plateau in northwestern Arizona is dominated by down to the west normal faults and half grabens. Movement is transferred eastward by stepovers and smaller NW striking faults. The major faults appear to die out near Peach Springs and Seligman, Arizona. Faults become less numerous, displacement decreases, and faulting jumps to the east as one moves toward the southwest corner of the Colorado Plateau. Additional field work is necessary to measure fault dips and calculate extension in detail, but this study will provide the framework and focus more detailed studies.