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Full extent of the Basin and Range
The 'Basin and Range Province' is a particular type of
topography that covers much of the southwestern
United States and northwestern
Mexico that is typified by elongate north-south trending arid
valleys bounded by
mountain ranges which also bound adjacent valleys.
Death Valley is a good example of a modified basin and range valley.
The basins are down-fallen blocks of crust and the ranges are relatively uplifted blocks, many of which tilt slightly eastward at their tops. The normal arrangement in the basin and range system is that each valley (i.e., basin) is bounded on each side by one or more
normal faults that are oriented along or sub-parallel to the range front.
This arrangement is very similar to the
horsts and
grabens seen in
divergent plate boundaries such as the
Mid-Atlantic Ridge or in failed rifting areas such as the Western Rift of the
Great Rift Valley in
East Africa. However the extent of the rifting in the Basin and Range is not concentrated into a single valley but is spread out over a very large area creating much smaller grabens laying roughly parallel to each other in a north-south direction (which leads to a
rain shadow effect resulting in exceedingly dry conditions in this province).
Geography
The province extends east from the
Sierra Nevada all the way to the
Colorado Plateau and extends south over northern parts of the
Baja California Peninsula. This covers parts of the
U.S. states of
Arizona,
California,
Idaho,
New Mexico,
Texas,
Oregon, and
Utah and almost all of
Nevada. Basin and Range topography also dominates large parts of the Mexican states of
Sonora,
Chihuahua, and
Baja California. The arid
Great Basin is part of this province as well as most of the
Sonoran Desert and the
Chihuahuan Deserts.
Geology
This unique topography has formed as the result of
extension (literally the Earth's crust is being pulled apart) that is thought to be caused by the effect of the
Pacific Plate moving north relative to the
North American Plate (this is the same force behind the creation of the
San Andreas Fault) and by other forces (see below). The crust here has been stretched up to 100% of its original width. In fact, the crust underneath the Basin and Range, especially under the
Great Basin, is some of the thinnest in the world. Along the roughly north-south-trending faults mountains were uplifted and valleys down-dropped, producing the distinctive alternating pattern of linear mountain ranges and valleys of the Basin and Range province. A map showing these stretch marks, and noting their association with earth movements, is at the USGS report on the
Pleasant Valley (Nevada) Earthquake.
Although there are other types of faults in the Basin and Range province, the extension and crustal stretching that have shaped the present landscape produce mostly
normal faults. The upthrown side of these faults form mountains that rise abruptly and steeply, and the down-dropped side creates low valleys. The fault plane, along which the two sides of the fault move, extends deep in the crust, usually an angle of 60 degrees. In places, the relief or vertical difference between the two sides is as much as 10,000 feet (just over 3000 m).

Kingston Range
Subsequent to the mountain building episode a large part of the mountain belt created in the
Laramide orogeny and previous orogenies (the
Sevier, and part of the
Nevadan) went through a long period of extension that persists today.
As the
rocky ranges rise, they are immediately subject to
weathering and
erosion. The exposed bedrock is attacked by
water,
ice,
wind and other erosional agents. Rock particles are stripped away and wash down the mountain sides, often covering young faults until they rupture again. Sediment collects in the adjacent valleys, in some places burying the bedrock under thousands of feet of rock debris.
There are several hypotheses trying to explain how the
continental crust of North America responded to the great deal of compaction it went through with the Laramide orogeny. There is at least some evidence to support all of these ideas but it is very possible that more than one is correct:
#Movement of the
Pacific Plate is stretching the
North American Plate toward the West.
#As the spreading center (
divergent plate boundary) of the subducting
Farallon Plate moved beneath the North American plate, it formed a "slab gap", which caused heat from the
mantle plume feeding the spreading zone to thin out the continental crust above it and cause the spreading (see
slab gap hypothesis).
#After the Laramide orogeny, the crust under the Rockies got overthickened and the
Great Basin spread out in response.
#The
continental root of the proto-Rockies was so deep that the bottom part broke off and was incorporated into the
asthenosphere.
Mineral resources
The Basin and Range province supplies nearly all the
copper and most of the
gold,
silver, and
barite mined in the
United States. A small amount of
petroleum is produced within the province, in
Nevada.
See also:
★
Copper mining in Arizona
★
Silver mining in Arizona
★
Silver mining in Nevada
References
★ Steven M. Stanley, ''Earth System History'' (W.H. Freeman and Company; 1999) pages 537, 540-543, 545 ISBN 0-7167-2882-6
★ Plummer, McGeary, Carlson, ''Physical Geology'', Eight Edition (McGraw-Hill: Boston, 1999) pages 321, 513, 514 ISBN 0-697-37404-1
★
USGS - Geologic Provinces of the United States: Basin and Range Province (adapted public domain text)
Further reading
★ ''Basin and Range'' by John McPhee, Noonday Press, 1990. ISBN 0-374-51690-1
★ ''Geology of the American Southwest : A Journey Through Two Billion Years of Plate Tectonic History'' by W. Scott Baldridge, Cambridge University Press, 2004. ISBN 0-521-01666-5