New Mexico Geological Society Annual Spring Meeting — Abstracts


Structural Analysis of Spectacular Late Eocene Soft-Sediment Deformation in the Lower Spears Group, Sawtooth Mountains, Western New Mexico

Jeffrey Dobbins1, Gary Axen1, Steven Cather2 and Peter Mozley1

1New Mexico Tech, 801 Leroy Pl, Socorro, NM, 87801, jdobbins@nmt.edu
2New Mexico Bureau of Geology & Mineral Resources, 801 Leroy Pl, Socorro, NM, 87801

https://doi.org/10.56577/SM-2016.427

[view as PDF]

Spectacular soft-sediment deformation (≤150-m thick) in the upper Eocene lower Spears Group is exposed along the northern periphery of the Mogollon Datil volcanic field (MDVF) in the Sawtooth, Datil, and Gallinas Mountains of western New Mexico. Despite detailed studies of the stratigraphy, geochronology, and geochemistry of volcanic and volcaniclastic rocks in the MDVF, no thorough structural analysis of widespread soft-sediment deformation has been undertaken. The present study exploits excellent exposures in the Sawtooth Mountains to reconstruct the late Eocene deformational history of the northern MDVF.

Four methods were used to analyze lower Spears Group deformation: (1) 1:6000 scale geologic mapping on enlarged 1:24,000 USGS topographic quadrangle base maps, (2) mapping fault and bedding traces on oblique photos of cliff exposures, (3) measuring and describing slip and separation indicators such as Riedel shears, fault-plane striations, drag folds, and displaced contacts, and (4) analyzing thin sections of cataclasite and undeformed rock samples.

A structural stack with five distinct levels is present throughout the study area. The lowest level exposed is the middle to late Eocene Baca Formation with gently east-dipping bedding. A detachment fault sub-parallel to underlying bedding is present in some locations at the upper Baca contact and in others less than five meters above a depositional contact. Above the Baca, the volcaniclastic unit of Largo Creek (VLC) of the lower Spears Group forms a sheet (0-150 m thickness) of variably contorted sandstones. In thicker sections, localized listric faults in lower exposures are truncated above by a zone of up to five sub-horizontal faults bounding deformed VLC sandstones. The upper VLC contact is an extensive gently- to moderately-dipping (5º-30º) detachment fault with indicators suggesting the upper plate slipped east or southeast. Overlying Dog Springs Formation (lower Spears Group) debris-flow deposits are sub-horizontal and parallel to the subjacent detachment in western peaks, but in eastern peaks dip steeply east (75º-85º) with stratigraphy facing east. South- and southwest-striking reverse-dextral faults offset the stack down to the east.

Analyzing the structural stack and incorporating previous investigators’ findings resulted in multiple spatial and temporal interpretations by the author. Cataclasite rip-ups within a cataclasite layer subjacent to the detachment imply multiple cataclasis events. The detachment fault separating the Dog Springs from underlying units formed during one or more mass movements, possibly landsliding or block spreading events. The upper plate detached from a western source, most likely an unstable topographic feature formed by the Hickman fault zone. In eastern lower Spears Group exposures outside the study area, exotic non-volcanic blocks were likely derived from eastern or southern sources. Crosscutting relationships between faults provide a timeline of deformation events. Following deposition of the lower Spears from 37-40 Ma, localized slumping and thrusting formed listric faults in the VLC. One or more large blocks of Dog Springs deposits detached from a western source and moved eastward over VLC deposits. Reverse-dextral faults offset the detachment fault down to the east, probably during late-Laramide transpression, which ended approximately 36 Ma, providing a minimum age constraint on deformation in the Sawtooth Mountains.

Keywords:

soft-sediment deformation, detachment fault, mass movement, Spears Group, Sawtooth Mountains, Mogollon Datil volcanic field

pp. 19

2016 New Mexico Geological Society Annual Spring Meeting
April 8, 2016, Macey Center, New Mexico Tech campus, Socorro, NM
Online ISSN: 2834-5800