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A PPENDIX California Rocks and Minerals A Brief Field Guide for Rock Hounds and Natural History Detectives This appendix presents an opportunity to explore in more detail how California’s geologic history is revealed by the distribution of so many kinds of rocks in the state. It is provided for those with an appetite for more details about the evidence California’s geologic history has left behind. It would be impossible to find one storage room or laboratory with the variety and quality of mineral and rock samples found in California. Figure 2-6 in text illustrates the rock cycle that produces this variety. The importance of the distribution of these minerals and rocks ranges far beyond geologic curiosity. We have already followed the clues they provide us about California’s tumultuous geologic history. In addition, these rock types and structures often control local and regional geomorphology—the California landscapes which evolve from them. The specific chemistry of soils produced when different rocks are weathered plays a significant role in the distribution of plants and animals in California. Certain types of rocks are associated with specific geologic hazards, especially when we build on them. Ores and gems are also found in and extracted from particular rock bodies, and some are quarried for building materials. Even if you are not a rock hound, you must appreciate the significant roles rock distributions play not only in the landscapes we view, but in California’s history and economy. Most of the minerals and rocks scattered around the state are left behind by past geologic processes. That is why this appendix follows the chapter on geologic history, which described the geologic events that produced California’s rocks. This discussion focuses on a search for some of the most common, interesting, and important rocks, minerals, and earth resources in California. Appendix Figure A-1 Granitic rocks near the top of Castle Crags in northern California are being weathered along a series of vertical joints and fractures. The high silica/quartz content of such granites makes them a little lighter in color and weight and also makes them resistant to erosion. the Basin and Range and Mojave. They make up a large portion of the basement of the Coast Ranges, and they are even buried by more recent volcanic material in northeastern California and by recent alluvial deposits in many California valleys. This “Sierra Nevada batholith” is composed of more than 100 different types of plutons, most referred to as granitic rock. Light-colored speckles that usually dominate this more felsic (high in silica) granitic rock are quartz and feldspar; darker speckles are usually less common and include flat flakes of biotite mica or other more mafic (higher in iron, magnesium, etc.) minerals such as amphibole or pyroxene. Specific names for these salt-and-pepper rocks (granite, quartzmonzonite, granodiorite, quartz diorite, etc.) refer to the specific chemistries of each. Recall that these rocks formed when an eastward dipping ocean plate was being subducted below the continent, mostly during the Mesozoic Era and the Nevadan Plutonic Rocks in California: Lifted and Exposed Intrusive igneous rocks are found throughout California; they dominate the basement rocks, and they are frequently exposed in the Klamath, Sierra Nevada, Transverse, and Peninsular Ranges and in the mountains of 1 Appendix California Rocks and Minerals 2 orogeny. Though some of this activity began even before the Mesozoic Era and some of it continued into the Cenozoic Era, 100 million years will serve as a convenient, average age for these rocks. Millions of years passed as enormous magma chambers formed below California and gradually cooled and crystallized to produce these rocks with large crystals. Darker plutons are composed of more ocean plate and mantle material from below; lighter granites formed more frequently when large volumes of higher silica continental crust were incorporated into the melt. Many of the once buried batholiths have since been pushed and faulted upward and exposed after overlying rocks were eroded away. About 60 percent of the surface rocks in the central and southern Sierra Nevada are made of these mostly granitic plutons. Lighter-colored dikes, sills, and veins in the batholith represent more felsic (higher silica) magmas that were the last to crystallize. The joints and fractures in the earlier-crystallized plutons served as conduits through which these hot magmas, which were still melted and often mixed with water, were squeezed and finally cooled and crystallized. Rare and valuable earth minerals (such as gold and silver) were sometimes incorporated WHERE TO FIND PLUTONIC ROCKS AND THEIR LANDSCAPES Klamath Mountains Granitic plutons, mostly Jurassic Period, similar to Sierra Nevada batholith. Castle Crags State Park More resistant granitic rocks form ridges above older, less resistant rocks they once intruded. More rapid weathering along joints isolates the pinnacles. Coast Ranges west of San Andreas Fault in Salinian Block Mesozoic Era granitic plutons, similar to Sierra Nevada and Peninsular Ranges. Faulting has moved them up next to the Franciscan melange (the other Coast Ranges basement). Montara Mountain (Santa Cruz Mountains) Quartz diorites are strikingly similar to Farallon Islands. Transverse Ranges Granitic plutons similar to other California mountains especially near and above San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountain resorts. Peninsular Range—San Jacinto Mountains from Palm Springs Tram and above Idyllwild; Santa Rosa and Laguna Mountains Southern California batholith dated at 70–120 mya. Slightly less felsic than northern California batholiths, but weather to produce landscapes similar to Sierra Nevada. Numerous pegmatite dikes noticeably cut through to produce gem sites. Upper San Luis Rey River sites have magnificent tourmaline crystals in rock cavities. Riverside Common Nevadan plutonic quartz diorites and monzonites intruded into older limestones, creating world-famous assemblage of 140 contact metamorphic minerals at Crestmore limestone quarries. Such minerals are distributed throughout California along edges of Mesozoic Era plutons, where older existing rocks have been heated and metamorphosed. Sierra Nevada Mountains Throughout the range, including eastern base around Alabama Hills (as seen in countless commercials and films). White-Inyo Mountains east of Big Pine Papoose Flat pluton (75–81 mya) squeezed through, thinned, and metamorphosed Cambrian Period sedimentary rock formations. Central and Eastern Mojave Roots of the Ivanpah Upland are composed of granitic quartz monzonite from the Mesozoic Era, but the rock and its erosional surface have been extensively buried by lava flows and cones since the Miocene Epoch. Granite Mountains Named after outcrops of course-grained White Fang quartz monzonite. Joshua Tree National Park Prominent blocky granitic (monzogranite) boulders are weathered into spheres and rock climbers’ playgrounds. Colorado Desert Plutonic rocks have wide range of ages, from pre- to post-Mesozoic Era. They include the youngest plutons in the state, found in the Chocolate Mountains and dated at just 23–31 mya. Many of these youngest plutons were intruded into some of the oldest rocks in the state. A Brief Field Guide for Rock Hounds and Natural History Detectives 3 Appendix Figure A-2 Volcanic boulders are scattered across the relatively young Sutter Buttes that erupt from the Sacramento Valley. Pasty eruptions of andesite and rhyolite left these rocks to be weathered into darker colors. into the melt and emplaced within the vein. Some of these intrusions are responsible for changing the human history and economy of California. Today’s vertical and horizontal joints and fractures in these plutonic rocks are sometimes a result of compressional and/or extensional tectonic forces that have stressed the buried rocks over millions of years. Other joints and fractures were formed more recently as overlying rocks were eroded away (unloaded), releasing pressure and allowing expansion of the rock masses. This exfoliation breaks the rocks at the surface into onion-like sheets and sometimes produces great outstanding domes. You might observe some or all of these features in any exposed granitic plutonic body in Califor- Appendix Figure A-3 Rocks were bur– ied, and then exposed to extreme heat and pressure that squeezed and contorted them into metamorphic rocks. Hundreds of millions of years later, they were lifted up in the Sierra Nevada and are now exposed to weathering here at May Lake in Yosemite. nia. Weathering processes are accelerated in the surface cracks between these rock masses, a topic covered in detail within Chapter 3. Volcanic Rocks: California’s Geologic History Flares Up It may surprise some Californians that active and potential volcanic hot spots are scattered about in at least four different areas of the state today. They include the majestic volcanoes and lava plateaus of the Cascades and northeastern California, the area above the Napa Valley near Clear Lake (including the geysers), the Basin and Range east of the Sierra Nevada, and south of the Salton Appendix California Rocks and Minerals 4 Sea in the Imperial Valley. Each of these areas has also experienced some modern volcanic activity. In this section, however, we will examine only the distribution of the volcanic rocks that have been left behind by past volcanic activity. Volcanic activity in human history will be examined in Chapter 3. A few of these ancient hot spots are near areas where volcanic activity happens to have continued to today. Where there is not a clear line, we will yield to Chapter 3’s section on modern volcanic processes and landforms. To manage this organizational problem, we ask the question: Where are some of the more common and impor- WHERE TO FIND ANCIENT VOLCANIC ROCKS AND THEIR LANDSCAPES Table Mountain north of Oroville A more resistant ancient lava flow (Lovejoy basalt) stands out in the foothills above weaker rocks that have been eroded away (an inverted topography) west of Lake Oroville. Sutter (Marysville) Buttes Within a 16X16 km (10X10 mi) area and at more than 600 m (2000 feet) high, these buttes are the only volcanic outcrops in Central Valley. Pasty eruptions with breccias and tuffs formed these plug domes of andesite and rhyolite. Probably an extension of the southern Cascades, they are very young. (The surrounding late Pliocene Epoch Tehama Formation was warped by these eruptions.) They are included here because they are isolated and detached geographically from the Cascades. Sierra Nevada Foothills east of Sacramento; Sonora After erosion denuded the ancient Sierra Nevada to lower hills about 20–25 mya, great deposits of volcanic ash invaded from the east to bury gold-rich streams. These are the rhyolitic pink tuffs of the Spring Valley Formation used as building stone during the Gold Rush. Miners were required to dig through it to reach gold deposits. After some erosion of that surface, extensive volcanic mudflows (including large volcanic cobbles) and basalts covered it. This is known as the Mehrten Formation (4–20 mya). Latite (intermediate between rhyolite and andesite) is found on Table Mountain northwest of Sonora (9 mya). Basaltic flows were left by the third and youngest volcanic period in this area less than 3.5 mya. San Luis Obispo; Morro Bay Along Hwy. 1 from San Luis Obispo to Morro Bay is the chain of fourteen resistant throats of volcanic plugs. Weaker rocks were stripped away from these “insides of volcanoes,” which are about 22 million years old, mostly made of andesite. Smaller 160 m (500 feet) Morro Rock is dacite (intermediate between rhyolite and andesite) and was once extensively quarried to make breakwater and fill. Refer to Chapter 2’s section on Cenozoic Era geologic history for the origins of these volcanoes. Pinnacles National Monument east of Salinas On the Monument’s west side, overlooking Soledad and the Salinas Valley, are Miocene Erhyolitic pyroclastic volcanic breccias. They have weathered and eroded into the spectacular caves and landscapes that have made the area famous. Rhyolite and some andesite and basalt are found on the east side of Pinnacles. Again, the origins of these rocks are examined in Chapter 2’s Cenozoic Era geologic history section. Transverse Ranges; Santa Monica Mountains The Conejo volcanics of the Transverse Ranges (especially in the Santa Monica Mountains and points north) make up many buff- and rust-colored slopes and cliffs. These Miocene Epoch volcanic rocks are sometimes mistaken for sandstone from a distance. They were extruded before the mountains were lifted out of the sea, and they represent one of the most widespread Tertiary Period volcanic formations in California. They stand out along Mulholland Hwy. a few miles north of the ocean; they were so severely fractured, they became a reservoir rock for oil at the Conejo Field east of Camarillo. Mojave Desert; eastern Mojave Outstanding volcanic features are preserved in the Mojave Desert. Cima Volcanic Field on the Ivanpah Upland is south of I-15 in the eastern Mojave. Here, at least forty cinder cones and lava flows up to 90 m (300 feet) formed from the early Miocene to the Holocene Epochs (7.6 million–13,000 years old). Since they formed protective caps on top of the older, deeply weathered granitic surface below, they stand out quite nicely. In several locations, entire flows or their remnants have held their ground while surrounding terrain was stripped away. Cima Dome itself is an upwarped granitic mass; scattered volcanic features formed on top of it. Road materials and cinder block are mined from many of the cones. Barstow to Amboy; Ludlow A chain of volcanic cones and their lava flows from Barstow east to Amboy exhibit classic examples of pahoehoe (ropy lavas), tubes, tunnels, blisters, collapsed domes, and volcanic bombs—a variety of features difficult to find south of the Cascades. Pisgah Crater, about halfway between Barstow and Amboy, is an extremely young cinder cone formed on top of very fluid and extensive basaltic lava flows. Dish Hill (also known as Siberia Crater) is also large, lies between Ludlow and Amboy, and is famous among rock hounds for granitic and olivine-cored volcanic bombs. Amboy Crater, on the eastern end of the chain, is only about 2,000 years old and may have the greatest variety of impressive features. From the trail up the cone and to Amboy crater, even the nongeologist can appreciate definitive volcanic features, including dark lava flows that spread from it across Bristol Playa. A Brief Field Guide for Rock Hounds and Natural History Detectives tant volcanic rocks that reflect California’s geologic history? See the adjacent box for answers. Metamorphic Rocks Reveal Geologic History As their name implies, metamorphic rocks are older rocks changed by geologic processes that usually require millions of years. Since most metamorphic rocks form in high pressure and/or heat environments deep below the surface, it takes millions of years of uplift and erosion of overlying rocks to expose them. Therefore, a discussion of the current distribution of metamorphic 5 rocks in California is also a discussion of some of the oldest geologic history of California. Most of the metamorphic rocks in California were formed from the late Paleozoic through the Mesozoic Eras and into the early Tertiary Period by two different processes. First, rocks caught between the two plate boundaries of a subduction zone were squeezed and metamorphosed by intense pressure. Second, other rocks were changed, but not totally melted, by intense heat during contact metamorphism. These contact zones and their metamorphic rocks formed when deep magmas generated by subduction rose toward the surface. Exceptions to these generalities include some of the oldest WHERE TO FIND CALIFORNIA’S METAMORPHIC ROCKS The Oldest Rocks The oldest rocks include gneisses and schists dated at 1.72–1.82 billion years old and are basement rocks of a continental crust with slightly younger granitic intrusions. They are scattered about the Transverse Ranges, northwest Mojave, and the Basin and Range. (See the Precambrian Era geologic history section in Chapter 2.) The Klamaths Metamorphic rocks of the Klamaths were also crushed and molded onto the North American continent. They are related to the Franciscan melange, but numerous plate collisions must have been responsible for their formation because their ages range from mid-Paleozoic Era through the Mesozoic Era, especially during the Nevadan orogeny. The South Fork Mountain Schists (blueschists formed about 120 mya) are examples. They indicate that the Coast Ranges were even attached to the Klamaths during part of the Mesozoic Era. Coast Ranges The many rocks of the Franciscan Complex (or melange) can be found throughout the Coast Ranges. These sedimentary and metamorphic rocks formed when sea floor materials were dragged east from the western Pacific, then caught and crushed against the continental plate during the Jurassic and Cretaceous Periods. The rocks were carried deep into the subduction zone, but they were pressed and squeezed up toward the surface, like toothpaste. The bluegreen schists exposed in the north and south Coast Ranges contain glaucophane, a mineral which forms when mafic marine rocks are exposed to high pressures, not extreme temperatures. Such minerals as jadeite are common in the green pebbles that have weathered off these melanges and washed up on central California beaches. Many other rocks (such as the common graywacke and chert) in the Franciscan Complex, or melange, show how it got the name melange, which means a mixture of different rocks. Some sedimentary sections of the melange are many thousands of feet thick. Conspicuous redcherts in the slopes of Marin County overlooking San Francisco are examples. California’s famous waxy/greasy, greenish serpentinites also formed in the Franciscan when deep magma from the upper mantle with high magnesium content flowed into faults and cracks and crystallized. These intrusives can be found on the San Francisco Peninsula because all of the hills of San Francisco are made of Franciscan rock. Mount Diablo, east of Walnut Creek (between the Bay Area and Central Valley), is also made of Franciscan rocks and is surrounded by serpentinite, California’s official state rock. Western Sierra Nevada Various metamorphic rocks are found in the Foothill Metamorphic Belt in the western Sierra Nevada, east of Sacramento and west of the Melones thrust fault. They likely formed when colliding plates crushed island arc material against the continent during the Jurassic Period, at the beginning of the Nevadan orogeny. Sheared Metamorphic Rocks from the Transverse Ranges, South The Pelona-Orocopia schists are found scattered from the Transverse Ranges down to the Chocolate Mountains east of the Imperial Valley. They formed when a variety of rocks from a deep ocean basin or trench were thrust together during the late Mesozoic Era. The related Garlock and Rand schists may have been broken off and dragged away from the other side of strike-slip faults to their present locations in the northwest Mojave; these rocks have been the focus of recent studies of the tremendous displacement that has occurred along the San Andreas Fault Zone during the past several million years. Contact Metamorphism Examples of rocks metamorphosed millions of years ago by intruding igneous plutons are throughout California. The Crestmore limestone quarries in western Riverside County, where there are more than 140 contact metamorphic minerals, is just one example. You will also find them scattered in road cuts along Hwy. 243 from Banning up to Idyllwild. These are just a few examples of the extensive metamorphic outcrops in the Peninsular Ranges. These events and their rocks are reviewed in other sections within this appendix and Chapter 2 where plutonic intrusions and earth resources are discussed. 6 Appendix California Rocks and Minerals more detailed descriptions of California’s sedimentary rocks are designed for more serious earth scientists— rock hounds who have set a goal to further extend their understanding of the distribution of rocks in California. Human geographers and others who have had enough of rocks and geologic history may want to skip this material. First, we will locate some of the oldest sedimentary rocks. Then, we will skip around California to find the most interesting and important sedimentary rock formations. We will investigate landforms these rocks have helped shape and the clues they have left about California’s geologic history. This section also serves as an excellent source for planning field trips. Appendix Figure A-4 Cretaceous Hornbrook sedimentary rock formations are exposed in numerous locations near I-5 and the Oregon border. Younger, resistant lava flows typical of the Cascades are seen looming over these formations higher in the distance. rocks in California, which were formed by similar processes much earlier in the Precambrian. See the adjacent box for some metamorphic rock details. Sedimentary Rocks and Their Fossils Reveal Geologic History Sediments and sedimentary rocks make up the majority of the surface of the earth’s crust and that is also true for California. Sedimentary rock formations provide some of the most dramatic and beautiful landscapes in California. In addition, they and the materials that were deposited and lithified with them also provide the most detailed accounts of ancient California environments and the processes that must have changed them. They often provide us with energy and mineral resources. Also, because new sediments continue to accumulate on top of their older kin in nearly every California basin and valley, the most productive farmland and almost all of the towns and cities of California are located on sediment and sedimentary rock. In the following section, we will examine some of the more interesting and important sedimentary rock formations in California. This is an opportunity to differentiate between two very different landscapes in California. There are the relatively flat, sedimentary basins where deposition of sediments continues and where most of the farms and people are located. Standing in contrast are the higher relief, mountainous areas where older sedimentary rocks have been tectonically uplifted and are exposed to differential weathering and erosion. Focus on the Distribution of Sedimentary Rocks: An In-Depth Section By now, you should have a general working knowledge of California’s geologic history and rocks. The following California’s Oldest Sedimentary Rocks: Showing Connections Some of the oldest sedimentary rocks in California are the 800 million–1.2 billion-year-old Pahrump Group rocks of the Basin and Range. These conglomerates, sandstones, siltstones, shales, limestones, and dolomites of the Crystal Spring, Beck Spring, and Kingston Peak Formations (from oldest to youngest, they are known as the Pahrump Group) are thousands of meters thick. They contain some very primitive single-celled algae fossils and stromatolites deposited in shoreline waters. Deposited on those rocks are the Noonday Dolomite, Johnnie Formation, and Stirling Quartzite that mark the end of the Precambrian (see Figure 2-1). Thousands of meters of Cambrian Period rocks were deposited on top of them. These rocks and their fossils (especially found in the White-Inyo Range) were deposited when the first multicellular animals, followed by the invertebrates (hard-shelled animals), appeared. Cambrian Period limestones and dolomites are also found in the mountains east of Death Valley (such as in Titus Canyon) and are scattered in other Basin and Range and Mojave Desert locations. The roof pendants of the Sierra Nevada (examined in a previous section of Chapter 2) probably include the same sequence of rocks as found in the Basin and Range, but they were more extensively metamorphosed by the Nevadan orogeny. Additionally, the marine depositional environments that dominated in those locations by the start of the Paleozoic Era were somewhat similar to environments of the Peninsular Range. Evidence that rocks were extensively metamorphosed is found within the limestones near Riverside and in other Paleozoic Era deposits of the region. In the Mojave, multicolored mudstones were deposited during the Cambrian Period to form the Latham shale with marine fossils. Deposits of iron ore are found in the middle Cambrian Period Bonanza King limestone in the southern Providence Mountains. Following the Cambrian Period, which begins the Paleozoic Era, the abundance and variety of sedimentary rocks increases with each younger geologic period. A Brief Field Guide for Rock Hounds and Natural History Detectives Returning to our standard method of reviewing rock formations, we will now discuss some of the most interesting sedimentary rocks from many different ages. We start a sweep around the state with the Great Central Valley region. Sedimentary Rocks Found Throughout Northern and Central California Central Valley. Thousands of feet of sediments have been accumulating since the Cretaceous Period in the downwarped basin we call the Central Valley. The layers generally dip down away from the Sierra Nevada and Coast Ranges toward the valley floor, so we see the older rocks only on the edges of the valley and in well samples. Starting with the marine Cretaceous sediments, overlying rocks become more frequently nonmarine into the Quaternary Period. Some produce oil and gas; other rocks are tapped for groundwater. The sedimentary rock layers are more than 7,600 m (25,000 feet) thick in the Sacramento Valley. These rock layers dip toward the valley on its western edge where the Coast Ranges rise above it and have weathered into long, parallel “hogback” ridges. It is clear that sediments have washed down from the surrounding steep mountain ranges (especially from the east) into the Central Valley since the Mesozoic Era. The most recent unconsolidated Holocene Epoch sediments cover today’s valley floor. The Kettleman Hills (south of Coalinga) represent a stretched anticlinal dome of Central Valley sedimentary rock folded up above the San Joaquin Valley floor. Rocks of this young structural feature produce not only oil and gas, but many different kinds of Tertiary Period fossils. Here, fossils from a shallow marine environment are found in the younger Pliocene Epoch Etchegoin and San Joaquin Formations. Below, in the late Miocene Epoch Santa Margarita Formation, Ostrea titan giant oyster fossils up to 15 cm (6 inches) long are found. The still deeper and older Miocene Epoch Temblor Formation, which is also exposed in the nearby Coast Ranges, yields Desmostylus sea cow and Merychippus horse fossils. Northwest California. In the Trinity Forest, limestones between Red Bluff and Humboldt Redwoods State Park on Hwy. 36 and near Hall City caves contain some of the youngest Permian Period animal fossils in North America; they must have been dragged east to this location on an ocean plate because they match fossils in the western Pacific. In the Klamaths, Cretaceous Period marine deposits were accumulated when the area was slightly below sea level just after the Nevadan orogeny. Marine fossils include ammonites and pelecypods in the Great Valley Sequence that were deposited before the Klamaths were uplifted. Conglomerates of these formations are exposed south of Weaverville and in the eastern Klamaths. Shallow-water marine fossils are found in the late Creta- 7 ceous Period Hornbrook conglomerates, seen near I-5 from Hornbrook to the Oregon border. In contrast, plant fossils in the conglomerates, sandstones, and shales of the Weaverville Formation (found near Weaverville) show it to be nonmarine, deposited on a swampy flood plain during the Oligocene Epoch. A variety of Miocene Epoch Wimer Formation loose clastic rocks are seen in the extreme northwestern Klamaths. Structurally downwarped basins may be smaller on the northwest coast compared to the expansive coastal valleys farther south, but some have accumulated similar rock formations of the same ages. The Eel River Basin is one of the largest. It extends from Cape Mendocino to Eureka and is filled with sedimentary rocks deposited during the last few million years. Pliocene Epoch marine sedimentary mudstones and other rocks of the Wildcat Group include formations with names such as the Eel River, Rio Dell, and St. George. One excellent exposure of the Eel River Formation has been uplifted and is seen at Scotia Bluff along the Eel River. Cascades and Modoc Plateau. Since the Cascades and Modoc Plateau are dominated by volcanic activity and rocks, they provide relatively few opportunities to study sedimentary rocks. However, there are some basins that have been filling with sediment that includes lake deposits and weathered and eroded volcanic material. At Lava Beds National Monument, fossils of a mastodon and prehistoric camel were found in the lava tubes. Will the recent sedimentary deposits be buried by future ash and cinder deposits or lava flows as some of their ancestors were? Sierra Nevada. In Chapter 2 we examined the metamorphosed, mostly Paleozoic Era roof pendants of the Sierra Nevada, which lie on top of the granitic rocks, especially in higher terrain. They represent the sedimentary rocks that formed when a depositional environment ruled in the Sierra, but they were later squeezed and faulted on a plate boundary. Most of them have been eroded away. In the northern Sierra Nevada, rock formations of the Silurian Shoo Fly complex include the cherts and limestones of an old ocean crust with accumulated material along a plate boundary. As expected, there are few deposits left in the Sierra Nevada from the mountain-building episode called the Nevadan orogeny. Today, scattered remnants of sediments accumulated after the Nevadan orogeny and its erosion are more common. Marine sediments and sandstones with fossils from the late Cretaceous Period are found on top of basement rocks along the current boundary between the Central Valley and the Sierra Nevada. In some northern Sierra Nevada foothills, the younger Eocene Epoch Ione Formation consists of sand, clay, and coal beds that have been mined to produce glass, bricks, wax, and fuel. 8 Appendix California Rocks and Minerals Sedimentary Rocks in the Coast Ranges Our search for sedimentary rocks continues in the Coast Ranges. Here, the geology is so complex and the rock formations (dating from the Mesozoic Era to the Pleistocene Epoch) are so diverse, we can only pick out a few examples. For more detail, refer back to the section in Chapter 2 on California geologic history, read articles in other publications, or take field trips to the Coast Ranges region. The Coast Ranges are dominated by mostly Cenozoic Era sedimentary rocks deposited on two types of basement, one of which is the previously examined Franciscan melange. Mixed with the metamorphic rocks of the melange are graywackes. They were deposited in chaotic currents and mudflows within deep marine basins below steep volcanic highlands, all near the subduction zone that existed during the Mesozoic Era. Thick deposits are exposed in numerous Coast Range locations along with the red cherts which contain single-celled deep sea fossils (radiolarian) and deep sea limestones. Along the margin between the Coast Ranges and the Great Central Valley are exposures of late Jurassic to late Cretaceous Periods marine conglomerate, sandstone, and shale of the Great Valley Sequence. These several thousand meters of sediments were washed from the east off the continent and lithified. They have been extensively folded and faulted and are now found on the eastern Mendocino and Diablo Ranges and the west edge of the Sacramento Valley. Extensive thick outcrops of nearly every age of Cenozoic Era sedimentary rocks have been severely faulted and displaced up to 300 km (200 miles) from one another since the Miocene Epoch in the Coast Ranges. They include the Paleocene marine sediments in the Santa Lucia and Diablo Ranges, in San Francisco, and at Point Lobos and Point Reyes. Eocene Epoch coal beds and clays indicate that California experienced tropical conditions; this includes the coal fields northeast of Mount Diablo, which were commercially mined until 1920. The Emerging Coastline. Deep ocean deposits of the Miocene Epoch Monterey Formation have abundant micro-fossils. This light-colored shale is found from Santa Rosa to near Monterey and from south of Morro Bay to Shell Beach. It is found as far south as the Peninsular Ranges; it is known as the Modelo Shale at Point Dume on the Malibu Coast and in the Santa Monica Mountains. The mostly marine Pliocene Epoch rocks give way to alluvial and lake deposits because the sea retreated for the last time toward the beginning of the Pleistocene Epoch. More recent deposits continue to accumulate to great thicknesses in subsided coastal basins of the Coast Ranges. Meanwhile, numerous marine fossils are found in rocks along the coast, such as in Pliocene Epoch siltstones Appendix Figure A-5 Travertine has accumulated over the rocks at Nojoqui Falls in Santa Barbara County and plants are trying to grow over it. The deposits of calcium and magnesium carbonate leave this cliff looking like solid limestone, though the underlying rock is not. at Drakes Beach (Point Reyes) and sandstones at Moss Beach. Additional fossils at other locations, such as near Año Nuevo State Beach, also confirm that the coastline is being lifted, exposing rocks once deposited below the sea. Sedimentary Formations in Southern California Coastal Mountains and Valleys In the Peninsular Ranges. You will notice late Cretaceous Period mainly marine sedimentary rocks in the Peninsular Ranges from the Santa Ana Mountains and scattered south into Baja. Among these, the mostly nonmarine Trabuco Conglomerate is common in the western Santa Ana Mountains. In contrast, marine sandstones and shales of the Rosario Formation contain huge ammonites (flat, coiled mollusk fossils from the Mesozoic Era). Exposures of the Rosario sandstones can be found along the coast at La Jolla Cove, Point Loma, and points south into Mexico. A Brief Field Guide for Rock Hounds and Natural History Detectives 9 Appendix Figure A-6 Deposited in the ocean and lithified only several million years ago, these sedimentary shales at Montana de Oro State Beach have been lifted, folded, and exposed. Differential weathering and erosion sculpt the tilting layers. Marine terraces rise in the background. Sedimentary rocks deposited after the Cretaceous Period in the Peninsular Ranges are widespread. Early Tertiary Period rocks include the Paleocene Epoch nonmarine Silverado Formation in the northern Santa Ana Mountains, where coal, clay, and mixed silicates used in glass making have been mined. Eocene Epoch deposits of rounded pebbles at the mouth of the ancient Poway River became the Poway Formation in San Diego (examined in the Cenozoic Era discussion in Chapter 2). The Miocene San Onofre breccia, with its chunks of broken schist, is found in spots along the southern coast. More extensive are the rocks formed since the later Tertiary Period in the Peninsular Ranges. They include the nonmarine conglomerate, sandstone, and siltstone of the Pliocene Epoch Mount Eden and San Timoteo Canyon Formations. Abundant and impressive marine fossils are easily recognized in the Pliocene Epoch San Diego Formation north of Mission Bay (see Fig. 2-1). Some of the thickest sedimentary deposits are found in the Imperial and Coachella Valleys, Elsinore trough, Perris Plain, Los Angeles Basin, and offshore basins, as well as in the coastal basins to the north in the Transverse and Coast Ranges. The rocks in these basins were weathered, eroded, and transported from mountain ranges and deposited and lithified in basins that exist to this day. Sedimentary Formations in the Transverse Ranges. In the Transverse Ranges, the Ventura Basin has more than 17,700 m (58,000 feet) of deposits from the Cretaceous Period to today. These include what may be the thickest Pliocene Epoch deposits on Earth. This is all part of a structural syncline that also includes the Soledad Basin, which has filled with nonmarine sediments. Some of the most interesting sedimentary rock formations in the Transverse Ranges have been radically lifted up and exposed by recent tectonic activity along and near the San Andreas Fault Zone. For instance, it might appear that the spectacularly dipping sandstones and conglomerates at three locations in and adjacent to the San Gabriel Mountains are similar: Vasquez Rocks along Hwy. 14 in the San Gabriels, Devil’s Punchbowl above Pearblossom, and Mormon Rocks in Cajon Pass. It turns out that the Devil’s Punchbowl and Mormon Rocks are both composed of Miocene Epoch deposits of the Punchbowl Formation. Embedded land vertebrate fossils are found at both sites; these two strikingly similar landforms may have been separated by sliding action along the San Andreas Fault Zone. The Vasquez Formation is also nonmarine, but dates back to the Oligocene Epoch. Interestingly, rock outcrops of the Diligencia Formation in the Orocopia Mountains of the Colorado Desert on the other side (east) of the San Andreas Fault match the Vasquez in type and age. There are so many other beautiful exposures of sedimentary rocks in the Transverse Ranges; this variety of complexly folded and faulted formations makes examination of even the most important ones an impossible task in this book. One example is the drive inland through the Malibu Canyon gorge from Hwy. 1 (Pacific Coast Highway) in the Santa Monica Mountains. You will see (in order) more than 15 million years of earth history from the Oligocene to the Miocene Epochs in exposures of nonmarine pink and purple Sespe, marine Vaqueros, Topanga, Conejo volcanics, and Modelo Shale (related to the Monterey) Formations within 15 minutes as you drive inland. The folded and faulted rock layers are now dipping at steep angles. Another example is in the Santa Ynez 10 Appendix California Rocks and Minerals Mountains north of Santa Barbara. Numerous rock formations, from the Jurassic and Cretaceous Periods’ Franciscan melange to the late Pleistocene Epoch Santa Barbara Formation, have been contorted and lifted upward. Sedimentary Rocks in Exposed Landscapes of Transmontane California Basin and Range. In the Basin and Range, there are many other interesting sedimentary rock formations in addition to the oldest ones, which we have previously examined. Besides the folded and faulted marine Cambrian Period limestones and dolomites exposed in Titus Canyon in Death Valley and surrounding areas, you will find the Oligocene Epoch Titus Canyon beds, which are also related to the Artist’s Drive Formation. Fossils of the great, horse-like herbivore Titanothere, rhinoceros, and camel suggest that a lush savanna existed here during the Oligocene Epoch. Fossils found in Pliocene Epoch rocks at Furnace Creek include leaves, diatoms, and animal footprints, while in the Coso Mountains, late Pliocene Epoch mammal fossils include dogs, peccaries, camel, horses, and mastodons. The area apparently became drier (except for occasional wet periods during the Pleistocene Epoch Ice Ages) as the Sierra Nevada was lifted higher to the west, blocking moisture from the Pacific, as it does today. Of course, the sedimentary rock record in the Basin and Range is far more extensive. (Some of these exposures were reviewed in the section on geologic history in Chapter 2.) You will find more details in specific geology publications. More recently, in the Basin and Range and into the Mojave Desert since the Pleistocene Epoch, numerous inland basins have been filling with silt and clay during wetter glacial periods and filling with salts during drier periods such as today’s. Some of these relatively young sediments, such as the Funeral Formation in Death Valley, have already been folded and faulted. Early Pleistocene Epoch fossils of horses, camel, deer, pronghorns, hog-like tapirs, and rabbits have been recovered along the shores of ancient Lake Manix in the Mojave. Many different kinds of salts (including chlorides, carbonates, potassium, and borates) are being mined from the saline deposits in these mostly dry lake beds in today’s Basin and Range and Mojave. Mojave Desert Sedimentary Formations. Moving toward the Mojave, in Red Rock Canyon, the lighter sandstone layers and the darker lava flows often found above them are commonly oxidized red. The nonmarine sedimentary rocks of this Miocene Epoch Ricardo Group contain fossils of petrified wood, rodents, primitive horses, camel, antelope, mastodons, rhinoceros, and saber-toothed cats that lived in a higher-rainfall savanna perhaps when lower hills to the west allowed moist ocean air masses to penetrate farther inland. Farther east, in Rainbow Basin north of Barstow, are the colorful Miocene Epoch sedimentary rocks of the Barstow Formation. The fossil pollen, rodent, tortoise, dog, cat, rabbit, pronghorn, horse, camel, rhinoceros, and saber-toothed cat suggest that the Miocene was wetter with summer rains. Continuing east, across the Mojave, in the Providence Mountains, are the limestones of the Permian Bird Spring Formation. Mitchell Caverns were still active during wetter periods as late as the Pleistocene Epoch, when water combined with limestone to produce carbonic acid that dissolved the rock and formed the caverns. Today, Mitchell Caverns are dry, but are open to tour. Geologists recognize the rock record near Mountain Pass to the north to be far more extensive than at popular Mitchell Caverns. Nearby, brachiopods and trilobites are found in the much older Cambrian Period Latham shale. This formation is made of red, green, and gray mudstones. For many years, fossil collectors have converged on the Marble Mountains east of Amboy, where the relatively accessible and remarkable crustacean trilobite, Fremontia fremonti, index fossils of the Paleozoic Era, are up to 20 cm (8 inches) long. Sedimentary Formations in the Southern Deserts. Farther southeast, toward the Colorado Desert, fossil wood has been found in Cretaceous Period sediments of the McCoy and Palen mountains. The Colorado Desert contains thick accumulations of mostly younger Cenozoic Era rocks. The oldest include Eocene Epoch marine deposits in the Orocopia Mountains (east of the Coachella Valley) and nonmarine rocks in the Palo Verde Mountains (southwest of Blythe). Slightly younger Oligocene Epoch continental deposits of the Diligencia Formation are also found in the Orocopias. Post-Oligocene Epoch sedimentary rocks are common and are many thousands of meters thick. They are exposed in the western Imperial Valley (including those in Anza Borrego State Park). They also lie below the surface of the valley into Mexico as well as below the Coachella Valley. The majority of these sedimentary rocks are nonmarine, except when the sea encroached in the Miocene Epoch, depositing the brown oyster beds of the Split Mountain Formation and the Pliocene Imperial Formation. After the sea retreated (probably blocked by the building Colorado River delta), the Pliocene Epoch Canebrake Conglomerate and the finergrained Palm Springs Formation were deposited. The Palm Springs Formation (with some petrified wood) can be seen west of the Salton Sea, where it is folded and being eroded. Still younger Lake Cahuilla deposits (since the Pleistocene Epoch) were laid flat on the surface of the older rocks and contain marine mollusks. These oyster beds were probably deposited in the high A Brief Field Guide for Rock Hounds and Natural History Detectives salinity of the late Pleistocene Epoch lake, rather than in ocean water. Basement rocks of the Valecito and Fish Creek Mountains on the western edge of the Imperial Valley resemble those of the Peninsular Range to the west. However, overlying sedimentary rocks resemble those of the Colorado Desert to the east. Consequently, following deposition of the Anza Formation during a dry period in Laguna Rocks by Patty Kellner 11 the Miocene Epoch, many of the younger deposits are somewhat similar to those in the Imperial Valley. Though we have come to the end of our more thorough survey of ancient rocks and the stories they tell, we have only started here what could be volumes and lifetimes of research on California’s earth history. It is time to move ahead to examine 21st Century processes and landscapes.