Stop #2
Above Figure #4: This figure shows the location of Stop
#2, it is at the base of the volcanic neck.
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Calavera Hills Volcanic Plug and Neck
Stop #2
(33 degrees 10’ 8” N and 117 degrees 17’ 5” W)
Stop #2 is midway up the hill and at the base of the
Calavera Hills Volcanic Plug. The rocks that comprise
the “volcanic neck” are very resistant to weathering relative to the
surrounding material. So the volcanic neck is what remains of the volcano after
the surrounding sediment and pyroclastic material have been stripped away. It
is composed of a fine-grained (aphanitic), “mouse
gray” rock that is dacitic in composition.
Above
Picture: Stop #2, this is the Calavera Hills
volcanic neck material.
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The
mineral grains of this unit cannot be seen with the naked eye. The rocks
here are “mouse gray” and considered intermediate in color. It probably has a similar mineralogy as the
rock unit at Stop #1 but the cooling history is very different. These rocks
were expelled out of the volcano and are very commonly associated with subduction zones as in the Cascade and Andes mountain
ranges. In summary, this unit has an aphanitic texture, is an extrusive igneous rock with a
composition of dacite. Below are a series of photographs showing the
fine-grained dacitic volcanic unit.
Above
Pictures: These 2 pictures show the fine-grained dacitic
unit at a distance and then as a close-up. The orange you see in this picture
is localized iron staining.
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Notice
the near vertical, long, linear features near the top of the ridge. This is called
columnar jointing. The columns form due to stress as the lava cools from the
base upward and from the top downward. The columnar joints are generally
six-sided as you can see in the last 2 pictures of this sequence. Here are a
series of pictures showing this feature.
Above
Pictures: This is a series of 3 pictures that show a feature called
columnar jointing.
Along the road on
the way to Stop #3 we see an exposure of Eocene Santiago Formation that is seen
being crosscut by the Miocene Dacite Volcanic Plug.
Above Picture: The gray material of the Miocene Dacite
Volcanic Plug material (left) crosscutting the tan Eocene Santiago Formation
(right).