Structural geomorphic analysis of the Virginia Mountains, Washoe County, Nevada

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Authors

Oldham, Richard L.

Issue Date

1971

Type

Thesis

Language

en_US

Keywords

Virginia Mountains , Washoe County , Nevada , anticlinal structures , N-S trends , Winnemucca Valley , Walk Lane , lineament , topography , volcanic rocks , erosion , drainage , topographic forms , structural geomorphic analysis , Mackay Science Project

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Abstract

The Virginia Mountains of Washoe County, Nevada, is an uplifted and collapsed anticlinal structure having a N-S trend but bending toward the southeast at the southern end of the range. NW and NNW fault trends in Winnemucca Valley and within the low hills on the eastern range front are believed to be a part of the Walker Lane lineament. Topographic, structural, and geologic evidence yields confidently a first-order, right-lateral, strike-slip fault interpretation. Also indicated are second-order left-lateral, strike slip movements along the eastern mountain front. The structurally very complex southern one-fifth of the range together with the northern portion of the Pah Rah Range suggest distributive branching of the Walker Lane lineament in the brittle Hartford Hill rhyolite as the lineament nears termination in southern Washoe County. The present topography of the Virginia Mountains is the result of bending of layers of volcanic rocks, high- angle and strike-slip faulting, and erosion in an arid to semi-arid climate. Major and minor drainage is controlled almost exclusively by the structure. Fault valleys are characteristic of the entire range and are the principal topographic forms, but many other types of drainage are present. The higher elevations are representative of old erosion surfaces.

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University of Nevada, Reno

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In Copyright(All Rights Reserved)

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