SOUTHWARD EXTENT OF THE WESTERN IDAHO SHEAR ZONE, OWYHEE MOUNTAINS, IDAHO: CONSTRAINING ALONG-STRIKE VARIATIONS IN TRANSPRESSIONAL SHEAR ZONES
The southern continuation (Owyhee segment) has three major distinctions from the main segment of the WISZ: 1) significantly less-developed solid-state fabrics, 2) a trend of 020 rather than north-south, and 3) a ~30-km transition in initial strontium ratios from 0.704 to 0.708 compared to a ~6-km transition near McCall, ID. A tectonic model explains these differences, assuming a rigid-body collision, transpressional kinematics, and an along-strike change in trend of the shear zone. A lower finite strain magnitude, a different strain path (larger simple shear and smaller pure shear components), and an increased width for the shear zone in the northern Owyhee Mountains is predicted, relative to the northern segment of the WISZ. More specifically, for the Owyhee Mountains, the model predicts a local oblique convergence angle between 24º and 39º, 40-69 km of convergent movement, 85-99 km of transcurrent movement, and overall lower finite strain. For the main segment of the shear zone, the model predicts a local oblique convergence angle of 44º-59º, 65-94 km of convergent movement, and 57-67 km of transcurrent movement. The differences predicted by the model for the two segments explain the less steep strontium gradient and the weaker fabric documented in the northern Owyhee Mountains.