2013
DOI: 10.1130/ges00928.1
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Birth of a plate boundary at ca. 12 Ma in the Ancestral Cascades arc, Walker Lane belt of California and Nevada

Abstract: The Walker Lane belt of eastern California and western Nevada is the northernmost extension of the Gulf of California transtensional rift, where the process of continental rupture has not yet been completed, and rift initiation can be studied on land. GPS and earthquake focal mechanism studies demonstrate that the Walker Lane belt currently accommodates NW-SE-directed movement between the Sierra Nevada microplate and the North American plate, but the timing and nature of rift initiation remains unclear. I pres… Show more

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Cited by 45 publications
(45 citation statements)
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References 129 publications
(217 reference statements)
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“…The Sierra Crest-Little Walker volcanic center also forms the largest volcanic center recognized to date in the ancestral Cascades arc, and it records the birth of the Walker Lane "future plate boundary" within the arc at ca. 12-9 Ma (Busby, 2013). The Ebbetts Pass volcanic center is the next major ancestral Cascades arc volcanic center to the north, and we show herein that it formed within a smaller Walker Lane pull-apart basin in Miocene to Pliocene time.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 51%
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“…The Sierra Crest-Little Walker volcanic center also forms the largest volcanic center recognized to date in the ancestral Cascades arc, and it records the birth of the Walker Lane "future plate boundary" within the arc at ca. 12-9 Ma (Busby, 2013). The Ebbetts Pass volcanic center is the next major ancestral Cascades arc volcanic center to the north, and we show herein that it formed within a smaller Walker Lane pull-apart basin in Miocene to Pliocene time.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 51%
“…The steep eastern range front was previously interpreted to be the result of Basin and Range extension (Bateman and Wahraftig, 1966;Slemmons, 1953Slemmons, , 1966. However, it is now known to form the western boundary of the Walker Lane, an ~100-km-wide, NNW-trending zone of dextral strike-slip and oblique normal faults that lies along the western edge of the Basin and Range Province (e.g., Faulds and Henry, 2008;Jayko and Bursik, 2012;Busby, 2013). The Walker Lane accommodates ~20%-30% of the right-lateral motion between the Pacific and North American plates (Argus and Gordon, 1991;Dixon et al, 2000;Oldow, 2003;Unruh et al, 2003;John et al, 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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