Geology

Regional Geology

Current Structural Setting

The current structural setting has the San Andreas Fault between the Pacific (San Diego) and North American (San Francisco) Plates (Figure 1a).  There are currently no subduction zones located in offshore Southern California as there were in the past and discussed below. There is a divergent plate boundary to the south in the Gulf of Mexico. A transform plate boundary (The San Andreas Fault) extends over much of the State of California. Farther north, there is a convergent plate boundary with subduction off the coast and andesite volcanoes inland.

 

Past Structural Setting

The features at the site were formed in very different structural setting (Figures 1b and 1c). Extensive subduction occurred on the western edge of North America from Early Mesozoic to Early Miocene time (approximately 200 to 20 million years ago MYA). A transition from subduction (and plate convergence) to primarily a transform boundary occurred during Miocene time (from approximately 20 to 5 MYA). This transform boundary eventually became the San Andreas Fault (Atwater 1998). The volcanic domes found in Northern San Diego County are thought to be a product of this tectonic transition from subduction to lateral motion.

 

A map of the pacific coast.The current plate tectonic setting of the WestCoast of North America. The current San Andreas transform fault.A map of the pacific coast.The tectonic setting of the WestCoast of North America 20 MYAA map of the pacific coast. The tectonic setting of the WestCoast of North America 20 MYA

Figure 1a: The current plate tectonic setting of the West Coast of North America. The current San Andreas transform fault.

Figures 1b and 1c: The evolution of the West Coast of the United States and the transition from subduction to a transform plate boundary, which becomes the San Andreas Fault. 2nd figure is 20 MYA, 3rd figure is 40 MYA. Red are divergent boundaries/spreading centers, black sawtooth are subduction and convergent boundaries, arrows pointing away across faults are transform boundaries.

 

Volcanic Domes

Calavera Hills is an exogenous volcanic dome and is a product of highly viscous, slowly moving magma (El-Najjar and Camp 2016)(Adkins 2017). Imagine a body of magma being slowly pushed to the surface and because of the high viscosity lava it’s being prevented from moving/flowing very far from the center. Many volcanic domes form during final stages of eruption in composite cone volcanos, where the thick viscous lava plugs the main vent. Calavera Hills is not related to composite cone activity.

A mountain with snow and a cloud of smoke. Mt. St. Helens in Washington State, its rhyolite in composition and erupted in 1980. Description automatically generatedThe Novarupta volcanic dome in Alaska

Both photos are lava domes. Photo 1 is from Mt. St. Helens in Washington State, its rhyolite in composition and erupted in 1980. Photo 2 is from Novarupta in Alaska which erupted in 1912.  Its located on the Alaskan Peninsula about 290 miles southwest of Anchorage, on a slope of the Trident (composite cone) volcano and composed of rhyolite. For scale this dome is 295 feet high and 1,180 feet wide.  As both are rhyolitic in composition, they both have more silica than Calavera Hills which is andesite. In volcanic rocks and with increasing silica they go from andesite (lowest), to dacite and then rhyolite (highest) in composition. The more silica the more viscous the magma/lava.

 

 

These are the No Agua Volcanic Hills, they are about 30 miles northwest of Taos, New Mexico. It’s a rhyolite dome that was mined for perlite, it has since been reclaimed. It’s in a volcanic field but unrelated to composite cone activity, but the mechanics are similar to the Calavera Hills dome with the exception of its composition. My first fulltime job after graduating from college was mapping the extent of the perlite on the flanks of the dome to estimate the remaining ore volume at the mine.

 

It was an interesting place, fighter jets would make low level runs above the speed of sound right by dome. It would be quiet, then a massive sonic boom, and many were so close you could actually see the pilots at eye level.

No Agua Volcanic Hills, they are about 30 miles northwest of Taos, New Mexico. It’s a rhyolite dome that was mined for perlite.

For scale the width of the dome is about 1 mile.

Local Geology

On this fieldtrip, we will observe three rock units ranging from Cretaceous to Miocene in age.  Each rock formation/unit is described below in order of decreasing age.

 

Make sure you read and understand the Field Notes, they are important for recognizing the geologic units in the area.

Geologic map of the Calavera Hills area. The Cretaceous Green Valley Tonalite (Kg (gv)) is shown in redish-pink, Eocene Santiago Formation (Tsa) is shown in tan, and the Miocene Dacite (Andesite) Volcanic Unit (Tda) is red and in the middle of the figure

                                                                                                Figure 1d Geologic map of the Calavera Hills area. The Cretaceous Green Valley Tonalite (Kg (gv)) is shown in redish-pink, Eocene Santiago Formation (Tsa) is shown in tan, and the Miocene Dacite (Andesite) Volcanic Unit (Tda) is red and in the middle of the figure (Tan and Kennedy, 1986)

 

 

Green Valley Tonalite (Cretaceous)

The first rock unit we will see is part of the Peninsular Ranges. It’s an intrusive igneous unit that was cooled slowly at depth and subsequently uplifted, eroded and exposed. It’s mapped as a tonalite, which is similar to a granite as its mainly composed quartz and feldspar (Larson 1948). The difference is that granite is richer in K spar and tonalite in plagioclase feldspar. This unit has a phaneritic texture (medium to coarse-grained), which means you can see the grains with the naked eye and an intermediate color and composition. It exhibits spheroidal weathering. This is a common type of weathering for this rock type and it gives an “onion skin” appearance to the exposures.

 

Field notes: Spheroidal weathering and pink/red/orange hues on the weathered outcrop.

This picture shows the relatively coarse grain size of the Green Valley Tonalite.On Stop #1 we pass some large intrusive igneous outcrops that exhibit spheroidal weathering. It looks like an “onion skin” peeling off of the rocks.

Green Valley Tonalite, this is a fresh surface coarse grained phaneritic texture. Photo 2 shows spheroidal weathering and pink/red/orange hues on the weathered outcrop.

 

Santiago Formation (Eocene)

In the Calavera Hills area, the Santiago Formation is very soft and for this reason there are only a few outcrops in the area. The local extent of the formation is primarily based upon the light-colored material it generates from weathering. The Santiago Formation was deposited as a beach sand. The sandstone is fine to medium grained, poorly cemented, poorly bedded, and is interbedded with siltstone and claystone that is locally prone to significant slumping. The Santiago Formation is not to be confused with the Santiago Peak Volcanics that are much older. This formation was renamed from the Scripps Formation locally in the mid-1980s (Tan and Kennedy 1986, 1987, 2005). It is found regionally from Orange County to Northern San Diego County where it begins to interfinger to the south of Leucadia with the Torrey Sandstone.

 

Field notes: The Santiago Formation is white to tan in outcrop and its sediment on the trails.

Exposures of white Santiago FormationThis picture shows the white eroded material from the Santiago Formation surrounding the volcanic plug.

Eocene Santiago Formation. On the second photo you can see the very light colored material on the left where its exposed in the roads. This distinct color makes it easy to identify.

 

Calavera Hills Volcanic Unit (Miocene)

This rock unit is gray in color and has an aphanitic texture, which means that you cannot see the grains with the naked eye. While originally mapped as dacite it's actually andesitic in composition. Andesite is intermediate between a rhyolite and basalt in composition (El-Najjar and Camp 2016)(Tan and Kennedy 1986, 1987, 2005).

 

Field notes: A very fine grained aphanitic texture and medium gray color. Green lichen likes to grow on these rocks for some reason.

.This picture shows examples of the gray, fine grained volcanic rocks found at Calavera Hills.Volcanic unit exposure near the top of Calavera Hills

Andesitic rocks associated with the volcanic dome found at Calavera Hills.

 

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