- Maria fold and thrust belt
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Maria Fold-and-Thrust-Belt
Ranges, Plains & Thrusted Forms Country United States States California, Arizona Regions Mojave Desert-NW—Sonoran Desert-SE Counties San Bernardino County-CA
Mohave County-AZ-(N)
La Paz County-AZ-(S)Municipalities Lake Havasu City—Parker-AZ
Vidal Junction—Blythe-CA
Quartzsite-AZBorders on Mojave Desert-Colorado Desert-W
Mojave Desert-AZ-(north)
Sonoran Desert-AZ-(east)Lake Lake Havasu River Chemehuevi Wash-CA-(n-west perimeter)
Colorado River-(N-S)
Bill Williams River-(E-W, (tributary))Length 65 mi (105 km), NW-SE Width 45 mi (72 km) The Maria fold and thrust belt (MFTB) is a portion of the North American Cordillera orogen in which geological structures accommodate roughly north-south to northwest-southeast vergent Mesozoic age crustal shortening. This lies in contrast to the remainder of the Cordillera, in which shortening is predominantly East-West. Structures associated with the Maria Fold and Thrust Belt are exposed in a series of mountain ranges in southeastern California and western Arizona.[1] Many of the deep structures of the MFTB have been exposed due to east-west to northeast-southwest Cenezoic age extension and unroofing.
In some parts of this fold-and-thrust-belt region, the extension resulted in the emplacement of metamorphic core complexes, the 'type example' of which is defined by the Whipple Mountains in southeastern California.
Contents
Geology
The Maria fold-and-thrust-belt is defined as the region where the compression that helped create the North American Cordillera – abruptly changed directions. North of the Maria fold-and-thrust-belt, the mountain ranges trend north-south, with east-west compression due to the subduction of the Farallon slab beneath western North America. At the Maria fold-and-thrust-belt, compressional deformation shifts to being generally north-south, with the front of the mountain ranges being defined by a roughly east-west line. This line then shifts gently to the east-southeast, where the Cordilleran deformation diffuses into a broad shear zone in northeastern Mexico.
Another notable feature that differentiates it from the rest of the Cordillera is that the deformation involves the rocks of the North American craton. Deformation in the remainder of the Cordillera only involves rocks that were part of the near-shore and offshore, sedimentary sequences.
Ecology
Since soils and climate differ across the Maria fold-and-thrust-belt, this regional geologic structure can be considered a "dividing line" for a number of flora and fauna species. For example, the species range of the endangered California Fan Palm, Washingtonia filifera does not extend north of the Maria fold-and-thrust-belt, or more specifically the Turtle Mountains.[2]
Ranges
The Maria fold-and-thrust-belt comprises a large number of ranges in the south-eastern Mojave and north-western Sonoran deserts,[3] including the:
- Big Horn Mountains
- Big Maria Mountains
- Bouse Hills
- Buckskin Mountains
- Dome Rock Mountains
- Granite Wash Mountains
- Harcuvar Mountains
- Harquahala Mountains
- Little Harquahala Mountains
- Little Maria Mountains
- McCoy Mountains
- Mesquite Mountains
- Moon Mountains
- Mule Mountains
- New Water Mountains
- Palen Mountains
- Plomosa Mountains
- Rawhide Mountains
- Riverside Mountains
- Whipple Mountains
Regional landforms
List of some regional landforms. (The ~east-west Bill Williams River appears as part of the central and northern perimeter of the Maria fold-and-thrust-belt, approximately paralleling the Rawhide Mountains, a slight northwest range on west end.)
- Alamo Lake State Park
- Bill Williams River
- Bouse Wash
- Butler Valley (Arizona)
- Cactus Plain
- Lower Colorado River Valley
- McMullen Valley
- Ranegras Plain
- Rice Valley
- Vidal Valley
See also
- List of mountain ranges of Arizona
- List of mountain ranges of California
- List of mountain ranges of the Lower Colorado River Valley
References
- ^ Knapp, J. H.; Heizler, M. T. (1990). "Thermal History of Crystalline Nappes of the Maria Fold and Thrust Belt, West Central Arizona". Journal of Geophysical Research (American Geophysical Union) 95 (B12): 20,049–20,073.
- ^ C. Michael Hogan. 2009. California Fan Palm: Washingtonia filifera, GlobalTwitcher.com, ed. Nicklas Stromberg
- ^ Spencer, Jon; Reynolds, S. J. (1990). "Relationship between Mesozoic and Cenozoic tectonic features in west-central Arizona and adjacent southeastern California". Journal of Geophysical Research 95 (B1): 539–555. Bibcode 1990JGR....95..539S. doi:10.1029/JB095iB01p00539.
External links
- Maria Fold and Thrust Belt, University of Colorado Western US Tectonics Course
Categories:- Mountain ranges of Southern California
- Geologic provinces of California
- Mountain ranges of the Lower Colorado River Valley
- Mountain ranges of the Colorado Desert
- Mountain ranges of the Mojave Desert
- Mountain ranges of Arizona
- Geography of Imperial County, California
- Geography of San Bernardino County, California
- Geography of Riverside County, California
- Landforms of Mohave County, Arizona
- Landforms of La Paz County, Arizona
- Mountain ranges of La Paz County, Arizona
- Geology of Arizona
- Geology of California
- Orogeny
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