- Ross Lake Fault
The 10-km-wide Ross Lake fault system (RLFS) is part of a 500-km-long zone of high-angle faults in the northern
Cordillera . The RLFS consists of two major sets of faults. The eastern set of theHozameen andSlate Creek fault s and more southerlyNorth Creek fault form the western boundary of theJura-Cretaceous Methow basin and in part separate it from metamorphic equivalents ofMethow strata . Minor structures along the North Creek fault record dextral strike slip bracketed between ~ 88 and 50 Ma. The same formations lie on both sides of the faults implying modest slip (10s of km?). The northernmost strand of the western fault set, the Ross Lake fault (s.s.), is a vertical zone of horizontally-lineated mylonite that separates upper-amphibolite-facies rocks of theCascades crystalline core from sub-greenschist-facies rocks to the east. Some dextral shear and 6-12 km of NE-side down normal slip occurred from 50(?) to post-45 Ma. At Elijah Ridge, the Ross Lake fault steps westward across a gently dipping extensional zone to theGabriel Peak tectonic belt. This ~ 100-km-long, NE-dipping mylonite zone is dominated by flattening, but kinematic indicators record dextral shear in the north and reverse shear farther south. This transpressional deformation occurred from 65 Ma (and earlier?) to 58 Ma when at least 7-24 km of dextral slip was probably transferred to the eastern faults by ENE-striking shear zones. Younger (< 50 Ma) ENE-striking sinistral faults at least locally accommodated 5-10 km of dextral strike slip by vertical axis rotation. The fault sets merge southward to form theFoggy Dew fault zone where mylonites record oblique dextral-normal slip (down-to-E). Slip is bracketed between 65- to 48 Ma; some occurred after 60 Ma and the zone records the regional transition from ~65-58 Ma transpression to ~57-45 Ma transtension. The fault zone is truncated to the SE by the 48 MaCooper Mtn . batholith, which also obliterates its intersection with the southern continuation of the Pasayten fault. South of this batholith, only a narrow, discontinuous shear zone is on strike with the Foggy Dew fault and similar units lie on both sides of this projection of the RLFS.
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