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  2. Basin and Range Province - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basin_and_Range_Province

    NASA satellite photo of typical Basin and Range topography across central Nevada. The Basin and Range Province includes much of western North America.In the United States, it is bordered on the west by the eastern fault scarp of the Sierra Nevada and spans over 500 miles (800 km) to its eastern border marked by the Wasatch Fault, the Colorado Plateau and the Rio Grande Rift.

  3. Basin and range topography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basin_and_range_topography

    With crustal extension, a series of normal faults which occur in groups, form in close proximity and dipping in opposite directions. [4] As the crust extends it fractures in series of fault planes, some blocks sink down due to gravity, creating long linear valleys or basins also known as grabens, while the blocks remaining up or uplifted produce mountains or ranges, also known as horsts.

  4. Horst and graben - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horst_and_graben

    A graben is a section of crust that has lowered relative to the blocks on either side, which is a result of its bounding faults dipping towards each other. [2] The plural of graben can be either graben or grabens. Graben form low-lying features such as basins and rift valleys. [1] [2] They can be very long relative to their width.

  5. Geology of the Death Valley area - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geology_of_the_Death...

    Geologists call this region the Basin and Range Province. Extensional forces causes rock at depth to stretch like silly putty and rock closer to the surface to break along normal faults into downfallen basins called grabens; small mountain ranges known as horsts run parallel to each other on either side of the graben. Normally the number of ...

  6. Graben - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graben

    Basin and Range Province of southwestern North America is an example of multiple horst/graben structures, including Death Valley, with Salt Lake Valley being the easternmost and Owens Valley being the westernmost. Lake George Basin, New York, U.S. Lake Tahoe Basin, California and Nevada, U.S. Republic Graben, Republic, Washington, U.S.

  7. Fault block - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fault_block

    Lifted type block mountains have two steep sides exposing both sides scarps, leading to the horst and graben terrain seen in various parts of Europe including the Upper Rhine valley, a graben between two horsts – the Vosges mountains (in France) and the Black Forest (in Germany), and also the Rila – Rhodope Massif in Bulgaria, Southeast ...

  8. Great Basin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Basin

    Extensional environments like the Basin and Range are characterized by listric normal faulting, or faults that level out with depth. Opposing normal faults link at depth producing a horst and graben geometry, where horst refers to the upthrown fault block and graben to the down dropped fault block. [21] [22]

  9. Horst (geology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horst_(geology)

    In physical geography and geology, a horst is a raised fault block bounded by normal faults. [1] Horsts are typically found together with grabens . While a horst is lifted or remains stationary, the grabens on either side subside . [ 2 ]