STRUCTURAL ANALYSIS IN THE BITTER SPRING QUADRANGLE, LAKE MEAD, NEVADA: UNRAVELING A COMPLEX RECORD OF EXTENSION
To date, we have identified three sets of faults. Northeast-trending faults run throughout the area, and include the largest faults; these generally dip west and indicate left-lateral oblique offset. North-south trending faults typically dip to the west, but are usually smaller in length and magnitude of offset. Northwest-trending faults cluster in certain areas; in the southern LRA, these faults dip to the southwest and in the northern LRA, they dip to the northeast.
Although mapping is not yet complete, the northeast-trending White Basin and Longwell faults appear to be en-echelon faults accommodating and transferring strain between two larger strands of the LMFS and thus, the presence of the Longwell Ridges may be explained by a strike-slip duplex mechanism. Somewhat smaller north-south trending faults found between the White Basin and Longwell faults may play a similar role but at a smaller scale. Clusters of northwest and north-south trending faults found in the LRA appear to be related to the termination of the White Basin and Longwell faults. Sets of faults do not consistently offset each other; instead, offsets are variable and complex. Recent work by Henza et al. (2007) suggests that such patterns are characteristic of areas that have undergone multiple phases of extension.