franklampard wrote:The American desert is a world-class destination all by itself, of course. It's such an iconic setting, familiar from Western movies, music videos, and car ads, that it feels like home even the first time you go there. Any place in the desert is special, but there are really noteworthy sites near Las Vegas. As you arrive, look around and drink in the sight of endless stone.
Las Vegas Valley is a downdropped basin typical of hundreds in the Basin and Range, the geologic province that extends over all of Nevada and a little beyond it on all sides. Over the last 25 million years or so, the Earth's crust here has been stretched in an east-west direction to around 150 percent of its former width, and the surface rocks have broken into strips of mountains running north-south. As a result the hot material beneath has bulged upward, turning Nevada into a high plateau rich in metal ores and geothermal energy. Numerous earthquakes have been recorded there during this century as the area's tectonic activity continues.
maybe I'm wrong, but, IIRC, the ranges in the great basin are "compression ridges".........the crust there is thin, but, the mountains are formed from movement and resulting compression of the north american plate and/or pacific plate, and interactions thereof?.......
Would not "stretching" tend to create volcanic activity regarding mountains?
Most I've seen out there are differing rock strata pushed upwards, much of it limestone, etc, standing on edge almost.
Most of the ranges are (relatively), north/south oriented, the plate movement is east/west.
Just wonderin'..........