eaton canyon field presentation

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Eaton Canyon and the San Gabriel Mountains By Aaron Chiang

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by Aaron Chiang

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Page 1: Eaton Canyon Field Presentation

Eaton Canyon and the San Gabriel MountainsBy Aaron Chiang

Page 2: Eaton Canyon Field Presentation

Background information

• Eaton canyon is the main emphasize, but the canyon itself is a small part of the San Gabriel Mountains

• Eaton Canyon itself doesn’t have specific history, but is just part of San Gabriel Mountain’s history

Page 3: Eaton Canyon Field Presentation

What types of rocks are present? (Eaton Canyon)• Diorite (right picture)

• Granidiorite (right picture)

• Granite Pegmatite (left picture)

Page 4: Eaton Canyon Field Presentation

Rocks: How they formed

• Oldest rock: Pelona Schist (not seen on the trip there) (Nourse, 2002)

• Thought to have formed from the subduction of the now destroyed Farallon plate underneath the North American plate during the Paleocene. (Nourse, 2002)

• The San Gabriel Mountains contain mainly igneous and metamorphic rocks that were disrupted and broken by faults that delineate the boundary between the North American and Pacific plate. (Nourse, 2002)

• The boundary between these two plates started forming in the late Cenozoic, particularly the Miocene. This fault is the famous San Andreas fault (Nourse, 2002)

Page 5: Eaton Canyon Field Presentation

Rocks: How they formed (cont.)• San Gabriel Mountains are bounded by the San Andreas fault

(right-lateral) to the north and the Sierra Madre-Cucamonga fault system (thrust) to the south (Nourse, 2002)

• The San Gabriel Mountains were formed because the San Andreas fault 'jogs' to the east along this area, creating tension between the southern block wanting to move northward and the north block moving south. In addition to this, the Sierra Madre-Cucamonga thrust fault exerts a compressional force against the rocks. The mountains are "currently experiencing a state of transpression" (Nourse, 2002, p. 175).

Page 6: Eaton Canyon Field Presentation

Rocks: How they formed (cont.)• Through palinspastic reconstructions done by multiple

geologists, it seems that the rocks in the San Gabriel Mountains were once connected to the rocks found in Orocopia and Chocolate Mountains in the south. When right-lateral movement was initiated through the birth of the San Andreas fault, it moved some of these rocks northward. (Nourse, 2002)

• San Gabriel Mountains:

Page 7: Eaton Canyon Field Presentation

Plants & Animals

• The prickly-pear cactus is "most common in disturbed areas such as … land once cleared by man" (Vaughan, 1954). It serves as food for many animals like rats, mice, and rabbits.

• The coyote is the most dominant predator in Eaton Canyon, though it was not seen on the time of the visit (Vaughan, 1954)

• Evolution of animals

and plants in this area

are not widely

documented in this

area.

Page 8: Eaton Canyon Field Presentation

Ecosystems:

• Eaton Canyon is known for a waterfall at the end of its “short” trail. We can assume that animals go there for a drink of water or to cool off in the summer heat.

• Picture on the left are boulders

right before the waterfall

Page 9: Eaton Canyon Field Presentation

Ecosystem (cont.)

• The mountains prevent cold ocean air from leaving the coastal basins, keeping them cool. In comparison, the Mojave desert, which is on the other side of the Mountains, receives the brunt of the heat and mostly stays dry. (Vaughan, 1954)

• The picture is part of a dry river bed along the Eaton Canyon path.

Page 10: Eaton Canyon Field Presentation

Ecosystems (cont.)

• The picture listed below shows how the mountains block the heat from the Mojave desert

Page 11: Eaton Canyon Field Presentation

Bibliography

• Nourse, J.A. (2002). Middle Miocene reconstruction of the central and eastern San Gabriel Mountains, southern California, with implications for evolution of the San Gabriel fault and Los Angeles basin, in Barth, A., ed., Contributions to Crustal Evolution of the Southwestern United States: Boulder, Colorado, Geological Society of America Special Paper 365, p. 161–185.

• Vaughan, T.A. (1954, November 15). Mammals of the San Gabriel Mountains of California. Naturespace, 7. Retrieved from http://www.naturespeace.org/sangabrielmammals1954.b.htm

• [San Gabriel Mountains]. Retrieved August 1st, 2013

Fromhttp://kimandgeoff.com/wp-content/gallery/san-gabriel-skiing/p4123190.jpg

• [San Gabriel Mountain Wind Patterns]. Retrieved August 1st, 2013

From http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/.a/6a00d8341c630a53ef0153929a1b65970b-pi