CONTROLS ON STRUCTURAL VARIABILITY IN LARAMIDE BASEMENT-INVOLVED ARCHES, U.S.A
In both arches, minor faults indicate unidirectional, subhorizontal shortening, with regional shortening oriented 065° in the southern Beartooth arch (n=1581) and 085° in the northeast Front Range (n=3326). Map-scale structures are more variable in orientation. Minor faults adjacent to structures that are not orthogonal to regional shortening directions indicate slip variably deflected from regional trends in a manner consistent with vertical axis rotations and/or stress refraction during of strike slip.
The importance of pre-existing basement weaknesses is apparent in both areas. In the southern plunge of the Beartooth arch, structural geometries and balancing suggest that a lack of connecting weaknesses between the east-directed Beartooth and Oregon Basin thrusts may have forced west-directed, hanging-wall backthrusting on the Rattlesnake Mountain and Pat O'Hara structures, which appear to follow pre-existing weaknesses themselves. Eventually, the Line Creek thrust broke through, connecting the Beartooth and Oregon Basin thrusts. In the northeast Front Range, dextral strike-slip faulting along the NE-striking, Proterozoic Skin Gulch Shear Zone allowed the transition from west-directed thrusting near Fort Collins to east-directed thrusting at the Wyoming border.
Interestingly, areas of strike-slip faulting in both structures are marked by saddles in the arches, suggesting that arch amplitude is maximized where thrusting, and thus crustal thickening, predominated. Where strike-slip faulting occurred, typically along pre-existing basement weaknesses, shortening was maintained without the crustal thickening, creating a saddle in the arch.