GEOLOGY
Ocean
For much of the past 600 million
years the land that is now Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area
was the bottom of a deep ocean basin and the western coast of North
America was in present day western Utah. A rich variety of marine life
flourished in those waters and left behind deposits of shells and
skeletons more that 9,000 feet thick which were eventually compressed
into limestone and similar carbonate rocks.
Swamps
Beginning approximately 225 million
years ago crustal movements caused the seabed to slowly rise. Streams
entering the shallower waters deposited mud and sand which later
consolidated into shales and marine sandstones. Changing land and sea
levels trapped large bodies of water which later evaporated leaving
behind layers of salt and gypsum in some areas. Exposure of the
sediments to the atmosphere allowed some of the minerals to oxidize,
resulting in red and orange colored rocks. Streams meandering across the
broad plain deposited sand, mud, gravel and other debris such as logs.
In some cases, minerals in the groundwater replaced the organic
materials in the buried logs forming petrified wood. Petrified wood is
one of the few fossil remains found in the rocks at the foot of the
cliffs.
Deserts
About 180 million years ago the area
was completely arid, much as the Sahara Desert is today. A giant dune
field stretched from this area eastward into Colorado, and windblown
sand piled more than half-a-mile deep in some spots. As the wind shifted
the sands back and forth, old dunes were leveled and new ones built up
leaving a record of curving, angled lines in the sand known as "crossbeds".
These shifting sands were buried by other sediments, and eventually
cemented into sandstone by iron oxide with some calcium carbonate. This
formation, known locally as the Aztec Sandstone, is quite hard and forms
the prominent cliffs of the Red Rock escarpment. In some areas the iron
minerals in the rocks have been altered and concentrated giving the rock
its red color.
Thrust Faulting
The most significant geologic feature of Red Rock Canyon is the Keystone
Thrust Fault. The Keystone Thrust is part of a large system of thrust
faults that extends north into Canada and began to develop approximately
65 million years ago. A thrust fault is a fracture in the earth's crust
that is the result of compressional forces that drive one crustal plate
over the top of another. This results in the oldest rocks on the bottom
of the upper plate resting directly above the youngest rocks of the
lower plate. At Red Rock Canyon, the gray carbonate rocks of the ancient
ocean have been thrust over the tan and red sandstone in one of the most
dramatic and easily identified thrust faults to be found. The Keystone
Thrust Fault extends from the Cottonwood Fault along State Route 160
north for 13 miles along the crest of the Red Rock escarpment. It then
curves east along the base of La Madre Mountain before it is obscured by
very complex faulting north of the Calico Hills.
Technical reference:
Final Environmental Assessment, Oil and Gas Leasing in the Red Rock
Canyon Recreation Lands, U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Land Management, 1980.
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area
HCR 33, Box 5500
Las Vegas, Nevada, 89124
[702] 515-5350
BLM/LV/GI-99/027+8300
*U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE:1999-785-518
|