Proterozoic Tectonic Evolution Of The Picuris Mountains, Northern New Mexico
BAUER, PW
JOURNAL OF GEOLOGY
v. 101(#4) pp. 483-500 JUL 1993
Abstract:
The gross structure of the Picuris Range, defined by the buckled and
imbricated km-thick Ortega Formation quartzite, is that of a tight synclinorium
bounded by limb-parallel ductile shear zones. Folds are moderately inclined,
horizontal, and are locally refolded, cleavage-transected, and cut by
ductile faults. Three boundaries separate lithostratigraphic successions:
(1) the south-dipping Pilar shear zone, which separates the Glenwoody
Formation from overlying Hondo Group, shows both reverse and normal motion;
(2) the Plomo fault is a south-dipping, ductile reverse fault, which separates
the Hondo Group from the structurally overlying, but older, Vadito Group;
and (3) the north-striking Picuris-Pecos fault, which truncates both of
the other boundaries, separates supracrustal rocks from an eastern plutonic
terrane. Granitoids (1680-1450 Ma) intrude Vadito Group rocks only. The
first two boundaries do not juxtapose different tectonometamorphic terranes,
even though they are major shear zones. Although the Picuris Range has
common characteristics with adjacent ranges, several features mark it
as unusual (cleavage-transected folds, a problematic distribution of plutons,
and a map-scale anticline). These features may be manifestations of the
strain heterogeneity characteristic of the Proterozoic rocks of New Mexico,
rather than evidence of diverse tectonic histories. Folding and top-to-the-north
shearing occurred during a progressive shortening event, perhaps related
to the ca. 1650 Ma Mazatzal orogeny of Arizona and central New Mexico.


