• Title of article

    Three-dimensional strain produced by >50 My of episodic extension, Horse Prairie basin area, SW Montana, U.S.A.

  • Author/Authors

    Vandenburg، نويسنده , , Colby J. and Janecke، نويسنده , , Susanne U. and McIntosh، نويسنده , , William C.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
  • Pages
    21
  • From page
    1747
  • To page
    1767
  • Abstract
    The Horse Prairie basin of southwestern Montana is a complex, east-dipping half-graben that contains three angular unconformity-bounded sequences of Tertiary sedimentary rocks overlying middle Eocene volcanic rocks. New mapping of the basin and its hanging wall indicate that five temporally and geometrically distinct phases of normal faulting and at least three generations of fault-related extensional folding affected the area during the late Mesozoic (?) to Cenozoic. All of these phases of extension are evident over regional or cordilleran-scale domains. The extension direction has rotated ∼90° four times in the Horse Prairie area resulting in a complex three-dimensional strain field with ≫60% east–west and >25% north–south bulk extension. Extensional folds with axes at high angles to the associated normal fault record most of the three-dimensional strain during individual phases of extension (phases 3a, 3b, and 4). Cross-cutting relationships between normal faults and Tertiary volcanic and sedimentary rocks constrain the ages of each distinct phase of deformation and show that extension continued episodically for more than 50 My. Gravitational collapse of the Sevier fold and thrust belt was the ultimate cause of most of the extension.
  • Journal title
    Journal of Structural Geology
  • Serial Year
    1998
  • Journal title
    Journal of Structural Geology
  • Record number

    2224455