We report the results of a low temperature (T >= 50 mK) and high field (H <=
180 kOe) study of the Hall resistivity in single crystals of YbAgGe, a heavy
fermion compound that demonstrates field-induced non-Fermi-liquid behavior near
its field-induced quantum critical point. Distinct features in the anisotropic,
field-dependent Hall resistivity sharpen on cooling down and at the base
temperature are close to the respective critical fields for the field-induced
quantum critical point. The field range of the non-Fermi-liquid region
decreases on cooling but remains finite at the base temperature with no
indication of its conversion to a point for T -> 0. At the base temperature,
the functional form of the field-dependent Hall coefficient is field direction
dependent and complex beyond existing simple models thus reflecting the
multi-component Fermi surface of the material and its non-trivial modification
at the quantum critical point