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Geologic map of the Humboldt Peak quadrangle, Elko County, Nevada [COMPLETE DIGITAL PRODUCT WITH GIS]
Geologic map of the Humboldt Peak quadrangle, Elko County, Nevada COMPLETE DIGITAL PRODUCT WITH GIS


 
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Title: Geologic map of the Humboldt Peak quadrangle, Elko County, Nevada

Author: Allen J. McGrew
Year: 2018
Series: Map 186
Version:
Format: digital files, 875 MB, includes PDF of plate: 43 x 37 inches, color; text: 23 pages, color
Scale: 1:24,000

Folders containing files:

m186z
|\data
| |\CrossSections (contains images of the final cross sections)
|
| |\geodatabase (contains the ESRI geodatabase files for the map)
|
| |\GlobalMapper (contains image of the final slope enhanced hillshade and geo polygon compliation)
|
| |\images (contains different types of images used on teh map plate)
| | |\LayerFiles (ESRI ArcGIS layer files of each layer in the table of contents of the ArcMap MXD file)
|
| |\ShapeFiles (ESRI shapefiles for each layer in the ArcMap table of contents of the ArcMap MXD file)
|
|\docs (contains the text document to accompany map)
| |\metadata (contains the metadata as a text file (.txt) for:
| | Geodatabase
| | FeatureDataSet
| | Each FeatureClass in the Geology FeatureDataSet
| |Images of the unit list and correlation
| |PDFs of the Map Text, and Map envelope
|
|\maps (contains the final ESRI ArcGIS 10.5.1 ArcMap MXD file, and matching PDF)


Located in central Elko County, Nevada, the Humboldt Peak quadrangle exposes the central and highest part of the East Humboldt Range (EHR). It is flanked to the east by Clover Valley and a northerly trending line of hills.

The central East Humboldt Range probably represents the structurally deepest part of the Ruby Mountains–East Humboldt Range metamorphic core complex. The high-grade core of the EHR consists of migmatitic upper amphibolite facies rocks that achieved peak P-T conditions during Late Cretaceous metamorphism up to 8 kb and 775°C. The deepest structural levels, exposed in Lizzies Basin in the west-central part of the quadrangle, form a migmatite complex with >67% leucogranitic rock. In the northwest part of the quadrangle, this migmatite complex is overlain in the cirque wall above Winchell Lake by a southward-closing, kilometer-scale recumbent fold known as the Winchell Lake fold-nappe (WLN). The WLN folds a sequence of intensely metamorphosed, migmatized and profoundly attenuated Neoproterozoic to Mississippian metasedimentary rocks. Farther north in the adjacent Welcome quadrangle the WLN is cored by Nevada’s oldest rocks—Neoarchean to early Paleoproterozoic orthogneiss and paragneiss that were thrust over the Neoproterozoic to Mississippian metasedimentary sequence before peak metamorphism and WLN-related folding. Overprinting this assemblage at higher structural levels is a WNW-directed, kilometer-scale mylonitic shear zone that diachronously exhumed this high-grade terrain during extensional tectonism bracketed between late Eocene and Miocene. Together, the mylonitic shear zone and the detachment fault that forms its roof probably accommodated much more than 15 km of extensional displacement. Cutting through the metamorphic core along the steep, eastern face of the East Humboldt Range is a younger, post-Miocene normal fault that remained active into the Quaternary. In the northern part of the quadrangle this normal fault uplifts and juxtaposes the high-grade core against moderately east-dipping Middle Miocene volcanic and hypabyssal intrusive rocks (rhyolitic quartz porphyry). A single exposure of flat-lying vitric tuff, also of Miocene age, lies to the east of the east-dipping rhyolite-bearing sequence, but it is unclear at present whether the flat-lying strata are faulted down against the rhyolitic rocks or overlie them in angular unconformity. The line of hills in the northeastern part of the quadrangle consists of Paleozoic sedimentary rock that probably represents the down-faulted “cover” of the metamorphic core complex.

Finally, the late Quaternary basin fill to the east of this line of hills was faulted down against the Paleozoic sedimentary rocks along the Clover Valley fault, which strikes northward through the adjacent Welcome quadrangle toward the town of Wells where it may correlate with the fault that produced the Mw 6.0 Wells earthquake in 2008.

Funding for this project derived from several sources, including: NSF Research Grants awarded to A.W. Snoke (University of South Carolina and University of Wyoming), University of Wyoming teaching and research fellowships, NSF Post-doctoral Research Fellowship EAR 92-08855 awarded to Allen McGrew, a Geological Society of Nevada quadrangle mapping grant, a grant of financial assistance from Dale Kraemer, and University of Dayton grants in Aid of Research.

Suggested Citation:
McGrew, A., 2018, Geologic map of the Humboldt Peak quadrangle, Elko County, Nevada [digital files, 875 MB]: Nevada Bureau of Mines and Geology Map 186, scale 1:24,000, 23 p.

© Copyright 2018 The University of Nevada, Reno.
All Rights Reserved.

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