preliminary geologic map of the grapevine 7.5' …€¦ · 136.4 ma 105 ma 105.2 ma 121.3 ma...

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136.4 Ma 105 Ma 105.2 Ma 121.3 Ma 135.6 Ma 101 Ma af Qf Qf Kpc Qyf Ks Qyf Qyf Qyf Kle Qls Kg Qf Qof Kbm Qls Ks Kbm Qyf Qls? Qls Kset |g Qyf Qls Tt Ttg Qf Kseg Tmg Kdc af Tts Kg Kle Ttc Qf Qf Qf Qls af Qyf Ttjl Qof af Qyf |g |g Qvof Qls Qf Qa Tts Qls Kg Qf Ttjm Qyf Qls Qls Qf Qw Ttjm Tts Kle |g Qof Ttjl Qls |g Ks Ksm Qls QTt Ttg Tts Qls Ks Qls Qf Qyf Tbc Qw Ttg Tbc Qyf Ttjm Qls Tt Tt Qyf Qof Qf Qw Tbc Qls QTt Qof Ttg Qls? Qf Ttjm af Qls Tt Qls af Kdc Qyf Ttvd Kbm Qof Qyf Qf Qof Ttc Jg Ttc Qls Qls Qyf Tt Qyf Tmg Tmg Qf Qyf Qf Ttjm Ttjl Qf Qyf Ttjm Qls Qls QTt Ttjl Qls Ks Ttjm QTt Qa Ttjm Qf af af Qls Qf Tbc Kdc Qof? Qyf Qls Qf Ttgb Kg }|m Qls Qls Qf Ttvb Qls Qf Qls Tt Qls Tmg Qls Qyf Qyf Tt Qls Qls Ttg Qf Qf Qf Qls Qls Tmg Tbc Tbc Qf Qof Qls Qf Ttjl? Qf Kset Ttju Qf Qls Ttjl Ksu Tmc Qls? |g Qls Jg Ttg Qls Qls Qls Ttvb Qls Qyf Tmc Tmg Tt Qls Qa Tts Qf Qls Qof Qf Ttjl Tbc Qls Ttju Qf Qls? Qf Qls Ttvb Tmg Qls |g Qa Tse af Ttvb Tmc Qw Qa Tmc af Qw Ttvd Qyf Ttvd Qa Qyw? Qf Qf Ttjl? Qf Tse Qw Qa Ttvb Ttvb Qof Qf Qf Qyf Qf Qf Ttjm Qls af Qls Qyf Qf Ttvd Qa Qa Qls? Qyf Qa Qls af Tse Qya Qls Qf Qa Ttva af Qf Qls Qf Tmg Qf Qf Tt Qa Qpa Qa Qf Qya? Qf Ttvb Qls? Ttvd Qf Qls? Qf Qls Qf Qf Qyf Kg Qa Tbc Ttvb Qls Qls? Qw Qyf Qyf Qls Qf Qls Qw af Qls Tt Qls Qls Qa Tt Ks Ksm af Tmg Qls Ttjl Qf Tmg Kbm Qls Tmg Ttju Qf Ttjl? Tmg Ttg Qyf |g Kg Qls Ttg Qf Kset Qls Qa Tmg Qf Qw Ks Qls Qf Qf Qls? Qya Qf Kbm Qls Kseg Qya Ttjl Qf Qya Qyf Qya Qf Kseg Qls? Qls? Qls Ksm Qls Qf Qls Qls? Qls Qls Qya Tts Qof Qls Ksm Qyf Ksm Ttjm Kbm Qf Ttjl Tmc Qf Ttju Tmg Kdc Tts Qf Qls Qls Qf Qya Ks Tmc Qls Tts Qls Qf Qls Qya Qf Kpc Qls Qf Qls Qf Qya Qya |g Qya Qw Qls Qls Qa Ks? af? Ttc Qya Qls Kseg Qya Ttvd Qls Qyf }|m Ttvb Ksm Ks Tbc Qf Qyf? Qya Kseg Tmg Qf Ttg Tmc Ksm Tmc Tmc Qw Ksm Qf Ksm Tt Qls Qyf Qf Qf Ksm? Qa Qf Qof Qya Tmg Qls Tmg Qya Qf Qvof Qa Ttvb Qf Kpc Kpc Ttjl Ttjl Tts Tt Qf Qf Kbm Qf Qls Ttjl Qls Qa Qya Qf Qf Qls Tmc Pa sto ri a F au lt Fa ul t R a n d Fa u l t T h rus t Gra p e v i n e F ault Thr u s t H i l l s Pl e it o 36 35 55 30 33 30 65 57 75 57 50 35 45 55 65 50 70 42 45 50 50 50 52 80 40 38 43 80 74 50 50 57 55 60 62 35 50 63 70 70 70 25 40 35 30 35 80 80 76 82 80 80 65 65 82 29 36 22 63 66 42 48 44 61 50 71 53 65 79 65 14 88 75 61 55 70 75 50 67 70 50 40 42 40 37 75 50 60 45 70 70 80 75 40 37 50 50 72 53 45 60 75 73 62 50 45 60 75 60 65 72 65 75 60 60 75 85 85 80 65 55 85 75 80 60 65 55 47 25 25 35 60 62 47 48 65 60 85 67 80 75 60 55 22 18 40 44 40 42 32 35 44 25 27 35 30 45 45 50 60 35 20 30 50 25 85 70 65 50 83 75 75 62 50 60 64 69 62 80 50 50 45 37 50 10 8 8 80 80 60 45 83 58 30 17 19 40 34 49 47 25 30 61 31 64 28 38 83 57 47 29 8 30 23 25 16 35 68 57 30 36 72 35 24 84 40 44 46 51 35 19 44 35 38 28 34 67 39 25 12 55 66 45 31 22 36 63 38 39 30 50 55 70 35 40 55 65 75 70 55 49 18 17 9 15 30 32 45 65 50 74 45 66 70 58 35 65 62 61 67 60 48 84 37 32 36 20 70 60 63 52 119°0'0'' 35°0'0" 34°52’30” 119°0'0'' 34°52’30” 118°52’30” 118°52’30” 35°0'0" STATE OF CALIFORNIA – EDMUND G. BROWN JR., GOVERNOR THE NATURAL RESOURCES AGENCY – JOHN LAIRD, SECRETARY FOR NATURAL RESOURCES DEPARTMENT OF CONSERVATION – MARK NECHODOM, CONSERVATION DIRECTOR CALIFORNIA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY JOHN G. PARRISH, Ph.D., STATE GEOLOGIST This geologic map was funded in part by the USGS National Cooperative Geologic Mapping Program, Statemap Award no. G13AC00163 PRELIMINARY GEOLOGIC MAP OF THE GRAPEVINE 7.5' QUADRANGLE, KERN COUNTY, CALIFORNIA: A DIGITAL DATABASE VERSION 1.0 By Brian P.E. Olson Digital Preparation by Brian P.E. Olson and Carlos I. Gutierrez 2014 PRELIMINARY GEOLOGIC MAP OF THE GRAPEVINE 7.5’ QUADRANGLE, CALIFORNIA Copyright © 2014 by the California Department of Conservation California Geological Survey. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without written consent of the California Geological Survey. "The Department of Conservation makes no warranties as to the suitability of this product for any given purpose." Projection: Universal Transverse Mercator, Zone 11N, North American Datum 1927. Topographic base from U.S. Geological Survey Grapevine 7.5-minute Quadrangle, 1991; Photorevised 1974. Shaded relief image derived from USGS 1/3 arc-second National Elevation Dataset (NED). Professional Licenses and Certifications: B.P.E. Olson - PG No. 7923, CEG No. 2429 65 25 35 MAP SYMBOLS 27 ? 27 ? ? Contact between map units - Solid where accurately located; short dash where inferred; long dash where approximately located; dotted where concealed; queried where identity or existence is uncertain Fault - Solid where accurately located; long dash where approximately located; short dash where inferred; dotted where concealed; queried where identity or existence is uncertain. Arrow and number indicate direction and angle of dip of fault plane Thrust Fault - Barbs on upper plate; solid where accurately located; short dash where inferred; dotted where concealed; queried where identity or existence is uncertain. Arrow and number indicate direction and angle of dip of fault plane Syncline - Solid where accurately located Overturned syncline - Solid where accurately located Anticline - Solid where accurately located; long dash where approximately located; dotted where concealed Overturned anticline - Long dash where approximately located; dotted where concealed Antiform - Solid where accurately located Bentonite bed Strike and dip of sedimentary beds. Number indicates dip angle in degrees: Inclined bedding Vertical bedding Overturned bedding Strike and dip of igneous foliation. Number indicates dip angle in degrees: Inclined foliation Vertical foliation Strike and dip of inclined metamorphic foliation. Number indicates dip angle in degrees Strike and dip of inclined joints. Number indicates dip angle in degrees. Sample locality showing radiometric age date; may be shown with leader line 25 25 136.4 Ma SELECTED REFERENCES Chapman, A.D., 2012, Late Cretaceous gravitational collapse of the southern Sierra Nevada batholith and adjacent areas above underplated schists, southern California: Ph.D. dissertation, California Institute of Technology, map scale 1:24,000. Chapman, A.D., Kidder, S., Saleeby, J.B., and Ducea, M.N., 2010, Role of extrusion of the Rand and Sierra de Salinas schists in Late Cretaceous extension and rotation of the southern Sierra Nevada and vicinity: Tectonics, v.29, no.5. Chapman, A.D., Luffi, P.I., Saleeby, J.B., and Petersen, S., 2011, Metamorphic evolution, partial melting and rapid exhumation above an ancient flat slab: insights from the San Emigdio Schist, southern California: Journal of Metamorphic Geology, v.29, no.6, p.601–626. Chapman, A.D. and Saleeby,J.B., 2012, Geologic map of the San Emigdio Mountains, southern California: Geological Society of America, Map and Chart m 101, map scale 1:40,000. Chapman, A.D., Saleeby, J.B., and Eiler, J., 2013, Slab flattening trigger for isotopic disturbance and magmatic flare-up in the southernmost Sierra Nevada batholith, California: Geology, v.41, no.9, p.1007-1010. Cole, R.B., and Decelles, P.G., 1991, Subaerial to submarine transitions in early Miocene pyroclastic flow deposits, southern San Joaquin basin, California: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v.103, no.2, p.221–235. Critelli, S., and Nilsen, T.H., 2000, Provenance and stratigraphy of the Eocene Tejon Formation, Western Tehachapi Mountains, San Emigdio Mountains, and Southern San Joaquin Basin, California: Sedimentary Geology, 136(1), p.7-27. Dibblee, T.W., Jr., 1973a, Geologic maps of the Santiago Creek, Eagle Rest Peak, Pleito Hills, Grapevine, and Pastoria Creek quadrangles, Kern County, California: U.S. Geological Survey Open File Report 73–57, map scale 1:24,000. ______, 1973b, Stratigraphy of the Southern Coast Ranges near the San Andreas Fault from Cholame to Maricopa, California: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 764. Dibblee, T.W., Jr. and Minch, J.A. (ed.), 2005, Geologic map of the Grapevine/south 1/2 of Mettler quadrangles, Kern County, California: Dibblee Geological Foundation, Dibblee Foundation Map DF-174, map scale 1:24,000. Grove, M., Jacobson, C.E., Barth, A.P., and Vucic, A., 2003, Temporal and spatial trends of Late Cretaceous-early Tertiary underplating of Pelona and related schist beneath southern California and southwestern Arizona: Tectonic Evolution of Northwestern Mexico and the Southwestern USA: Geological Society of America, Special Paper 374, p.381-406. Hall, N.T., 1984, Late Quaternary history of the eastern Pleito thrust fault, northern Transverse Ranges, California: Stanford, California, Stanford University, unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, 89 p., 16 pls., scale 1:6,000. Hoots, H.W., 1930, Geology and oil resources along the southern border of San Joaquin Valley, California, in Contributions to economic geology: U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 812-D, p. 243-338, scale 1:62,500. Jacobson, C.E., Grove, M., Pedrick, J.N., Barth, A.P., Marsaglia, K.M., Gehrels, G.E., and Nourse, J.A., 2011, Late Cretaceous–early Cenozoic tectonic evolution of the southern California margin inferred from provenance of trench and forearc sediments: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v.123, nos.3-4, p.485-506. Keller, E.A., Zepeda, R.L., Rockwell, T.K., Ku, T.L., and Dinklage, W.S., 1998, Active tectonics at Wheeler Ridge, southern San Joaquin Valley, California: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v.110, no.3, p.298–310. Keller, E.A., Seaver, D.B., Laduzinsky, D.L., Johnson, D.L., and Ku, T.L., 2000, Tectonic geomorphology of active folding over buried reverse faults: San Emigdio Mountain front, southern San Joaquin Valley, California: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v.112, no.1, p.86–97. Lagoe, M.B., 1987, Cenozoic stratigraphic framework for the San Emigdio Mountains, California, in Davis, T.L. and Namson, J.S., Editors, Structural Evolution of the Western Transverse Ranges: Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists, Book 48A, p. 85–98. Lancaster, J.T., Hernandez, J.L., Haydon, W.D., Dawson, T.E., and Hayhurst, C.A., 2012, Geologic Map of Quaternary Surficial Deposits, Lancaster 30’ X 60’ Quadrangle: California Geological Survey Special Report 217, Plate 22. Nilsen, T.H., 1987, Stratigraphy and Sedimentology of the Eocene Tejon Formation, Western Tehachapi and San Emigdio Mountains, California: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1268, map scale 1:62,500. Nilsen, T.H., Dibblee, T.W., and Addicott, W.O., 1973, Lower and Middle Tertiary stratigraphic units of the San Emigdio and western Tehachapi Mountains, California: U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 1372–H, p.H1–H23. Pickett, D.A., and Saleeby, J.B., 1993, Thermobarometric constraints on the depth of the exposure and conditions of plutonism and metamorphism at deep levels of the Sierra Nevada batholith, Tehachapi Mountains, California: Journal of Geophysical Research, v. 98, p. 609–629. Plescia, J.B., Calderone, G.J., and Snee, L.W., 1994, Paleomagnetic analysis of Miocene basalt flows in the Tehachapi Mountains, California: US Geological Survey Bulletin 2100. Ross, D.C., 1989, The metamorphic and plutonic rocks of the southernmost Sierra Nevada, California, and their tectonic framework: USGS Professional Paper1381, map scale 1:125,000. Saleeby, J., Farley, K.A., Kistler, R.W., and Fleck, 2007, Thermal evolution and exhumation of deep-level batholithic exposures, southernmost Sierra Nevada, California, in Cloos, M., Carlson, W.D., Gilbert, M.C., Liou, J.G., and Sorensen, S.S., eds., Convergent Margin Terranes and Associated Regions: A Tribute to W.G. Ernst: Geological Society of America Special Paper 419, p. 39–66 Smith, T.C., 1984, Wheeler Ridge and Pleito fault systems, southwestern Kern County, California: California Division of Mines and Geology, Fault Evaluation Report FER-150 (unpublished), scale 1:24,000. Streckeisen, A.L., 1973, Plutonic rocks – Classification and nomenclature recommended by the IUGS Subcommission on Systematics of Igneous Rocks: Geotimes, v. 18, p. 26–30. ______, 1976, To each plutonic rock a proper name: Earth Science Reviews, v. 12, p. 1–33. Tedford, R.H., 1961, Fossil mammals from the Tecuya Formation, Kern County, California: Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists, Society of Exploration Geophysicists, American Association of Petroleum Geologists, and San Joaquin Geological Society, Spring Field Trip Guidebook, p. 40-41. Turner, D.L., 1970, Potassium-argon dating of Pacific Coast Miocene foraminiferal stages: Geological Society of America, Special Paper 124, p.91-129. Williams, L.A., 1982, Lithology of the Monterey Formation (Miocene) in the San Joaquin Valley of California, in Williams, L.A. and Graham, S.A., Editors, Monterey Formation and Associated Coarse Clastic Rocks, Central San Joaquin Basin, California: Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists, Pacific Section, Volume and Guidebook, p.17-35. AIR PHOTOS/Digital Imagery U.S. Department of Agriculture, 1952, Aerial photographs, Flight ABL-21K, frames 14-20, 53-54, 173-177, 193-195, 212-214, black and white, dated 11/18 and 11/25/1952, approximate scale 1:24,000. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Farm Service Agency–Aerial Photography Field Office, National Agriculture Imagery Program (NAIP), 2012, 1–meter resolution. http://datagateway.nrcs.usda.gov/ U.S. Geological Survey, 1994, Digital Orthophoto Quarter Quadrangle Photos, dated 05/29 and 6/5/1994, Grapevine Quadrangle. (DOQQ and information concerning them can be obtained at http://earthexplorer.usgs.gov/). _____, 2002, Digital Orthophoto Quarter Quadrangle Photos, dated 06/11/2002, Grapevine Quadrangle. (DOQQ and information concerning them can be obtained at http://earthexplorer.usgs.gov/). _____, 2008, High Resolution Orthoimagery (HRO), Grapevine Quadrangle, dated 04/29/2008, 1–meter resolution, http://datagateway.nrcs.usda.gov/ _____, 2010, High Resolution Orthoimagery (HRO), Grapevine Quadrangle, dated 04/07/2010, 1–meter resolution, http://datagateway.nrcs.usda.gov/ U.S. Geological Survey, EROS Data Center, 1999, National Elevation Dataset, 1/3 arc second resolution, http://ned.usgs.gov/ APPROXIMATE MEAN DECLINATION, 2014 0 0 0 1 1 1 .5 .5 2 2 2 Thousand Feet Kilometers Miles Scale 1:24,000 Contour Interval 40 feet National Geodetic Vertical Datum of 1929 5 C OTT ON W O OD C R S ANT A C LA RA R 99 Bouquet Res Elderberry Forebay Castaic Lake Rosamond Lake Buckhorn Lake Piru Lake Santa Clara River Pyramid Lake Little Rock Wash Fillmore Gorman Lake Hughes Lebec Leona Valley Littlerock Mojave Piru Quartz Hill Rosamond Saugus Valencia Acton Agua Dulce Castaic 48 166 58 126 14 138 118°0'0"W 118°30'0"W 119°0'0"W 35°0'0"N 34°30'0"N Mapping completed under STATEMAP FY 2009-10 FY 2009-10 FY 2008-09 PREVIOUS YEARS CURRENT YEAR FY 2010-11 FY 2010-11 FY 2010-11 FY 2011-12 FY 2011-12 FY 2012-13 Kilometers Miles 5 5 (L (L (L (Los os os os s A A A Ang ng ng ngel el el eles es es s) ) ) ) (L (L (L (L Los os os os s A A A A Ang ng ng ng ngel el el eles es es es e ) ) ) ) ) ) ) (T (T (T (T T (T (T eh eh eh eh eh eh hac ac ac ac ac acha ha ha ha ha hapi pi pi pi pi pi) ) ) ) ) ) (T (T (T (T (T eh eh eh eh ac ac ac a ha ha ha ha a api pi pi pi pi pi) ) ) ) ) (T (T (T (T (T (T eh eh eh eh eh ehac a ac ac acha ha ha a api pi pi pi pi pi pi) ) ) ) ) ) ) l - Adjacent 30’ X 60’ quadrangles (Vic ctorv v v ville) ) ) ) m m m ma) a) a) a) uy uy uy uy yam am am am (C (C (C (C (Cu u u u GRAPEVINE FRAZIER MOUNTAIN ALAMO MOUNTAIN DEVILS HEART PEAK PASTORIA CREEK LEBEC BLACK MOUNTAIN COBBLESTONE MOUNTAIN WINTERS RIDGE LA LIEBRE RANCH LIEBRE MOUNTAIN WHITAKER PEAK LIEBRE TWINS NEENACH SCHOOL BURNT PEAK WARM SPRINGS MOUNTAIN TYLERHORSE CANYON FAIRMONT BUTTE LAKE HUGHES GREEN VALLEY WILLOW SPRINGS LITTLE BUTTES DEL SUR SLEEPY VALLEY SOLEDAD MOUNTAIN ROSAMOND LANCASTER WEST RITTER RIDGE BISSELL ROSAMOND LAKE LANCASTER EAST PALMDALE FY 2013-14 Quartz Syenite Quartz Monzonite Quartz Monzodiorite Syenite Monzonite Monzodiorite Granite Alkali-feldspar Granite Tonalite Diorite Syenogranite Granodiorite n o M n a r g o z e t i Quartz Diorite 90 65 35 10 5 20 60 Q Q A P 60 20 5 Classification of plutonic rock types (from Streckeisen, 1973; 1976). A, alkali feldspar; P, plagioclase feldspar; Q, quartz. CORRELATION OF MAP UNITS QUATERNARY Pliocene Holocene Pleistocene Miocene TERTIARY Oligocene CENOZOIC MESOZOIC PALEOZOIC CRETACEOUS JURASSIC Eocene af Qw Qa Qya Qpa Qf Qls Qyf Qof Qvof QTt Tmg Tbc Ttc Ttvb Ttva Ttvd Ttg Tse Ttjm Ttjl Ttju Kle Kbm Kg Kseg Kpc Kdc Kset |g Jg Ks }|m Pastoria Plate TSE San Emigdio Schist WSEMC Tmc Ttgb Ksm Ksu Tts ? ? Tt SURFICIAL UNITS Artificial fill and disturbed areas (historic, Holocene) – Consists of man-made deposits of earth-fill soils derived from local sources. Mapped specifically along the California Aqueduct structure, debris catchment basins, and includes fill soils along freeway/road alignments. Wash deposits (late Holocene) Unconsolidated sand and gravel deposited in recently active stream channels. Deposits are generally derived from local bedrock, or reworked from other local Quaternary sources. Subject to localized reworking and new sediment deposition during storm events. Modern alluvial fan deposits (late Holocene) – Unconsolidated to weakly consolidated, poorly sorted, gravel, sand, and silt deposits forming active, essentially undissected, alluvial fans. Includes small to large cones at the mouths of stream canyons and broad aprons of coarse debris adjacent to mountain fronts. Gravel clasts are typically unweathered with little to no oxidation. Unit includes local mudflow deposits consisting of massive sandy silty cobble to boulder gravel. (Units Q6 through Q8 of Hall, 1984). Modern alluvium (Holocene) – Unconsolidated to weakly consolidated, mostly undissected, fluvial gravel, sand and silt. Loose, yellowish-gray sand, silt, and pebble to cobble gravel. Consists predominately of moderately sorted coarse-grained to very coarse-grained arkosic sand. Ponded alluvium (Holocene) – Unconsolidated to weakly consolidated sand, silt, and clay deposits in closed depressions. Younger alluvial deposits (middle Holocene to Late Pleistocene) – Unconsolidated thin- to thick-bedded gravel. Deposited in point bar and overbank settings associated with active stream channels. Landslide deposits (Holocene to Late Pleistocene) – Unconsolidated to moderately well-consolidated jumbled rock debris consisting of surficial failures resulting from soil and rock creep, debris flows, and large-scale rotational rock slides. Recognizable by topographic expression or chaotic internal structure. Younger alluvial fan deposits (middle Holocene to Late Pleistocene) – Unconsolidated to weakly consolidated, pale brown to dark yellowish brown, silty and coarse to very coarse arkosic sand with pebbles and cobbles, moderately to well-stratified. Gravels are typically clast-supported, oxidized, and primarily from granitic sources, with many sub–rounded friable mafic schist clasts. Silt layers exposed in vertical stream bank cuts show weak prismatic structure. Unit is exposed as slightly dissected, elevated broad alluvial fans and canyon fill along the northern flank of the San Emigdio Mountains. Along the Plieto Fault these deposits are slightly deformed and partially dissected (Units Q4 and Q5 of Hall, 1984). Older fan deposits (Late to Middle Pleistocene) – Slightly to moderately consolidated, poorly sorted, silty pebbly sand to coarse gravel and boulder fan deposit. Unit is poorly to moderately stratified with a moderately developed Bt horizon up to 0.5m thick (Unit Q3 of Hall, 1984). Very old fan deposits (Early Pleistocene) –Moderately to well-consolidated, poorly sorted, coarse gravel and boulder fan deposit, highly elevated and dissected. TERTIARY SEDIMENTARY AND VOLCANIC UNITS Tulare Formation (Pleistocene to Late Pliocene) – Loosely consolidated light gray boulder conglomerate, conglomeratic sandstone, sandstone, and claystone, non-marine. Conglomerate clasts composed of siliceous (Monterey) shale, sandstone, and basement rocks in gray sandy to clayey matrix, clasts are angular to subangular. Monterey Formation (Middle to Early Miocene) Gould shale member – White to grayish brown siliceous and semi-siliceous biogenic shale and porcelanite, marine, thin bedded, platy to fissile, abundant soft-sediment deformational folding, weathers cream to buff, includes thin dolomite layers. Abundant foraminifera indicating Late Saucesian to Relizian age (Dibblee, 1973a; Nilsen et al., 1973). Clay shale member – Gray clay shale and siltstone, marine, bedded. Bena Conglomerate (Middle to Early Miocene) – Gray to brown sandy polymictic cobble conglomerate with minor sandstone interbeds, non-marine, massive to crudely bedded, clast-supported, composed of poorly sorted cobbles with some boulders in a weakly consolidated arkosic sand matrix. Interfingers to the west with the Monterey Formation. Deposited with angular unconformity on the Tecuya Formation east of Tecuya Canyon. Temblor Formation (Early Miocene) Siltstone member – Pale yellow, light gray, light brown siltstone and fine-grained sandstone, marine, massive to locally bedded. Sandstone member – Gray, light yellow, and yellowish brown fine- to coarse-grained and conglomeratic sandstone, marine, micaceous, locally silty, bedded, locally contains brown spherical boulder-sized concretions. Tecuya Formation (Early Miocene to late Oligocene) Sandstone and conglomerate member (Early Miocene) – Pale yellow, light yellowish brown, and gray medium- to coarse-grained and conglomeratic sandstone and sandy pebble to cobble conglomerate, nonmarine, massive to thick-bedded, cemented. Conglomeratic sandstones and conglomerates contain distinctive black subrounded to rounded fine-grained mafic clasts. Local basal boulder conglomerate, clasts up to 3 meters in diameter. Overall, this unit is lithologically similar to the granitic conglomerate member (map symbol: Ttg) but with a higher proportion of sandstone to conglomerate. Airfall tuff (Early Miocene?) – Hornblende-rich airfall tuff, well-indurated. Unit only occurs on ridgeline between Colorful and Tecuya Canyons, near the Grapevine Thrust Fault, where it appears to be in contact with both Jurassic gabbro (map symbol: Jg) and the lower members of the Tejon Formation (map symbols: Ttju and Ttjl). The nature of these contacts is not readily observable in the field and therefore, the unit is tentatively included with the other volcanic units in the map area, following Chapman (2012). Basalt flows (Early Miocene) – Black to dark reddish brown aphanitic and locally scoriaceous basalt with basalt breccias/conglomerate, subaerial, local silica-filled amygdules. Outcrops locally exhibit sub-parallel sheet jointing. Interfingers to the west with the sandstone member of the Temblor Formation (map symbol: Tts). In thin section the basalt exhibits pilotaxitic to trachytic texture (Cole and DeCelles, 1991). Breccia and conglomerate facies are poorly-sorted, inversely-graded, matrix-supported, and contain angular to subrounded boulder-sized clasts of thinly bedded aphanitic basalt. K/Ar date of 24.6 ± 2.9 Ma (Turner, 1970). Dacite tuff and tuff breccia (Early Miocene) – Light gray thin to medium-bedded tuff and gray, pink, and red dacitic tuff breccias, subaerial. Lower portion is 4 to 12 meters of thin-bedded tuff containing fragments of zoned and twinned plagioclase, quartz, biotite, hornblende, porphyritic dacite, and pumice in a vitric groundmass (Cole and DeCelles, 1991). Tuff facies also contains very thin pumice-rich beds. Upper part of unit consists of poorly-sorted, matrix-supported dacite tuff breccia, 1 to 15 meters thick, massive with local inverse grading, porphyritic dacite boulders (up to 4 meters in diameter) are common, locally welded with flattened and deformed pumice fragments. Basal contact is conformable with nonmarine conglomerate member (Ttg). K/Ar dates range from 21.5 ± 0.6 to 21.9 ± 0.7 Ma (Turner, 1970). Granitic conglomerate member (Early Miocene to late Oligocene) – Interbedded red, green, gray, and brown mudstone, siltstone, sandstone, and pebble to boulder conglomerate, nonmarine, occasional channel scour and fill structures. Conglomerate is primarily composed of granitic and metamorphic clasts, including metavolcanic and quartzite clasts, in a coarse sandy matrix. Occasional interbeds of fossiliferous marine siltstone. Mammalian fossils recovered between Tecuya Creek and Salt Creek are assigned to the early part of the Arikareean Land Mammal Age (Tedford, 1961). Granitic breccia member (late Oligocene) – Greenish gray boulder cobble conglomerate with minor very coarse-grained to pebbly sandstone, nonmarine. Only found along western edge of map area, discontinuous. TERTIARY SEDIMENTARY AND VOLCANIC UNITS (continued) San Emigdio Formation (late(?) to middle Eocene) – Thinly laminated siltstone and silty shale with fine-grained sandstone, marine/lagoonal deposits. Unit is exposed discontinuously throughout the map area and is not formally recognized east of Grapevine Creek. Locally contains molluscan megafossils and foraminifera, as well as carbonaceous and coal-bearing strata. Mapped as the Reed Canyon Siltstone Member of the Tejon Formation by Nilsen (1987) and Dibblee (1973a). Tejon Formation (middle to early Eocene) Metralla Sandstone Member (middle Eocene) – Silty and fine- to medium-grained sandstone with occasional siltstone interbeds and minor conglomerate, marine, poorly cemented. Number and thickness of siltstone beds and total unit thickness increase from east to west. Sandstone is typically highly bioturbated, exhibits large-scale cross-stratification, current ripple marks, and contains distinctive spherical calcareous concretions. Typical conglomerate clasts include quartzite, porphyritic volcanic, gneiss, and quartz diorite-granodiorite up to one inch in diameter. Sandstone and conglomerate beds contain locally abundant molluscan megafossils and siltstone beds commonly possess abundant foraminifera. Live Oak Shale Member (middle to early Eocene) – Laminated to massive shale and mudstone with interlaminated siltstone and minor sandstone interbeds, marine, poorly cemented. Extensively bioturbated by various irregular burrows and borings. Predominately fine to medium sandstone near the upper and lower contacts. Sandstone is commonly graded and exhibits cross-stratification and sole marks suggestive of turbidity flow deposits. Upper and lower contacts are both gradationally conformable. Shale contains abundant foraminifera and occasional invertebrate megafossils. Uvas Member (middle to early Eocene) – Buff-weathering conglomeratic medium- to coarse-grained arkosic sandstone and cobble conglomerate, marine. Sandstones are typically quartz-rich, well-sorted with medium to large-scale cross-bedding, current ripple marks, and massive bedding. The conglomerate beds contain well-rounded clasts of quartzite and porphyritic volcanic rock, as well as locally derived gneissic, granodioritic, and gabbroic clasts. Locally abundant invertebrate megafossils and foraminifera. INTRUSIVE AND METAMORPHIC ROCKS – MESOZOIC AND/OR OLDER Pastoria Upper Plate Lebec Granodiorite (Late Cretaceous) – Light gray medium- to coarse-grained biotite granodiorite, locally potassium feldspar porphyritic, some secondary chlorite and muscovite. Weighted mean U/Pb zircon ages range from 88 to 92 Ma (Chapman, 2012). Granite of Brush Mountain (Early Cretaceous) – Light colored coarse-grained granite, highly altered, liesegang banding common, forms yellow to orange craggy exposures. Occurs as the uppermost plate of the Pastoria fault system forming extremely altered klippen. U/Pb zircon age of 104.7 ± 0.9 Ma (Chapman, 2012). Marble (Mesozoic to Paleozoic?) – White to gray medium grained mylonitic to cataclastic marble. Techachapi-San Emgdio Complex (TSE) Garnet–Biotite Tonalite of Grapevine (Late Cretaceous) – Light-colored fine- to medium-grained, garnet biotite tonalite, foliated. Garnets range from 3 to 5 mm in diameter. Intrudes Grapevine Canyon paragneiss (Pzg). Correlative to the "garnet tonalite" of the Intrusive suite of Bear Valley in the Tehachapi Mountains and southern Sierra Nevda to the northeast (Saleeby et al., 2007). In thin section, samples have abundant plagioclase, biotite, hornblende, and disseminated small garnets. U/Pb zircon age of 101 ± 1 Ma (Saleeby et al., 2007). San Emigdio Quartz Diorite Orthogneiss (Early Cretaceous) – Dark colored, medium-grained, hornblende quartz diorite orthogneiss, foliated, locally contains coarse red almandine-rich garnet porphyroblasts up to 3 cm. Unit is located structurally above the Rand Fault and exhibits a strongly attenuated structural fabric characterized by anastomosing ductile to brittle shear zones. Correlative with the "hornblende gabbroids" of the Bear Valley intrusive suite of Saleeby et al. (2007) in the Tehachapi Mountains and southern Sierra Nevada to the northeast. In thin section, samples show biotite-rich shear bands and quartz grains with undulatory extinction. U/Pb zircon age of 105.8 ± 0.6 Ma (Chapman, 2012). Quartzofeldspathic Gneiss of Pastoria Creek (Early Cretaceous) – Heterogeneous mixture of tonalite, mafic rock, and granodiorite, moderately to strongly layered. Part of the "gneiss complex of the Tehachapi Mountains" described by Saleeby et al. (2007) with a U/Pb zircon age of 112 ± 2 Ma. Digier Canyon Quartz Diorite Orthogneiss (Early Cretaceous) – Brownish green to black medium-grained hornblende quartz diorite to gabbro orthogneiss, weakly to moderately developed foliation. Similar to Kseg but garnet porphyroblasts are rare. Western continuation of the White Oak diorite gneiss, which is a tectonic mixture of amphibolite to locally greenschist (retrograde) facies dioritic, gabbroic, and mylonitic gneisses representing the lower portion of the "gneiss complex of the Tehachapi Range" described by Saleeby et al. (2007). In thin section, samples have abundant hornblende, subhedral zircons, and weakly-developed polycrystalline quartz ribbons. U/Pb zircon ages range from 105.2 ± 4.2 to 121.3 ± 1.4 Ma (Chapman, 2012). San Emigdio Tonalite (Early Cretaceous) – Light colored garnet biotite tonalite and trondhjemite, massive to moderately foliated, composed predominantly of plagioclase, quartz, biotite, and reddish pink garnet. Metamorphosed to upper amphibolite facies. In thin section, samples show euhedral epidote phenocrysts embayed in biotite. U/Pb zircon age of 136 ± 2 Ma (Chapman, 2012). Grapevine Canyon Paragneiss and Grapevine Peak migmatite (Mesozoic to Paleozoic?) – Light to dark brown metasandstone and metapelite, strongly foliated and isoclinally folded, variably migmatized. Occurs as pendants within TSE complex. Contains mainly plagioclase, quartz, potassium feldspar, biotite, red garnet, and graphite, with large (1-3 cm) tabular muscovite pseudomorphs after kyanite (Pickett and Saleeby, 1993). Correlative with the "migmatitic paragneiss" at the structural base of the "gneiss complex of the Tehachapi Mountains" (Saleeby et al., 2007). San Emigdio Schist Metasandstone (Late Cretaceous) – Light blue to dark gray coarse-grained metapsammite, quartzite, and quartzofeldspathic schist, massive to well-foliated, highly sheared. Metasandstone member characterized by the peak mineral paragenesis of garnet + plagioclase + biotite + quartz ± muscovite ± kyanite (Chapman, 2012). Garnets typically occur as idoiblastic grains ranging from 1 to 5 mm. Grades from upper amphibolite to epidote-amphibolite facies. Occasional deformed quartzofeldspathic veins are visible in outcrops. The San Emigdio Schist represents forearc trench sediments deposited between 98 and 102 Ma, subducted to a depth of 30 to 35 km, and exhumed to upper crustal levels between 89 and 93 Ma (Grove et al., 2003; Jacobson et al., 2011, Chapman et al., 2013). In thin section, metasandstone samples have elongate quartz grains with undulatory extinction and subhedral garnet porhyroblasts with blebby quartz inclusions. Primary micas show uniform orientation. Metabasalt (Late Cretaceous) – Dark brown to greenish black metabasalt, commonly black and white polka-dotted to striped texture, commonly bimineralic with amphibole and plagioclase. Plagioclase porphyroblast composition typically ranges from An17 to An35 (Chapman, 2012). Diopsidic and augitic clinopyroxenes occur proximal to the Rand Fault. Appears as small, irregular bodies within map unit Ks. Ultramafic (Late Cretaceous) – Light to dark green talc and actinolite schist bodies, massive, waxy, associated with map unit Ksm. Western San Emigdio Mafic Complex (WSEMC) Gabbro (Jurassic) – Light purple to green fine- to medium-grained gabbro, olivine gabbro, and hornblende gabbro, massive to strongly foliated. Locally pervasive alteration of pyroxene to amphibole (Chapman, 2012). DESCRIPTION OF MAP UNITS af Qw Qa Qya Qyf Qf Qpa Qls Qof Qvof QTt Tmg Tmc Tbc Tt Tts Ttva Ttc Ttvb Ttvd Ttg Ttgb Tse Ttjm Ttjl Ttju Kle Ksu Ksm Ks Kg Kbm Kdc Kseg Kpc Kset }|m Jg |g Preliminary Geologic Map available from: http://www.conservation.ca.gov/cgs/rghm/rgm/preliminary_geologic_maps.htm

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Page 1: PRELIMINARY GEOLOGIC MAP OF THE GRAPEVINE 7.5' …€¦ · 136.4 Ma 105 Ma 105.2 Ma 121.3 Ma 135.6 Ma 101 Ma af Qf Qf Kpc Qyf Ks Qyf Qyf Qyf Kle Qls Kg Qf Qof Kbm Qls Ks Kbm Qyf Qls?

136.4 Ma

105 Ma

105.2 Ma

121.3 Ma

135.6 Ma

101 Ma

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119°0'0''35°0'0"

34°52’30”119°0'0''

34°52’30”118°52’30”

118°52’30”35°0'0"

STATE OF CALIFORNIA – EDMUND G. BROWN JR., GOVERNORTHE NATURAL RESOURCES AGENCY – JOHN LAIRD, SECRETARY FOR NATURAL RESOURCES

DEPARTMENT OF CONSERVATION – MARK NECHODOM, CONSERVATION DIRECTOR CALIFORNIA GEOLOGICAL SURVEYJOHN G. PARRISH, Ph.D., STATE GEOLOGIST

This geologic map was funded in part by the USGS National Cooperative Geologic MappingProgram, Statemap Award no. G13AC00163

PRELIMINARY GEOLOGIC MAP OF THE GRAPEVINE 7.5' QUADRANGLE,KERN COUNTY, CALIFORNIA: A DIGITAL DATABASE

VERSION 1.0By

Brian P.E. Olson

Digital Preparation by

Brian P.E. Olson and Carlos I. Gutierrez

2014

PRELIMINARY GEOLOGIC MAP OF THE GRAPEVINE 7.5’ QUADRANGLE, CALIFORNIA

Copyright © 2014 by the California Department of ConservationCalifornia Geological Survey. All rights reserved. No part ofthis publication may be reproduced without written consent of theCalifornia Geological Survey.

"The Department of Conservation makes no warranties as to thesuitability of this product for any given purpose."

Projection: Universal Transverse Mercator, Zone 11N, North American Datum 1927.

Topographic base from U.S. Geological SurveyGrapevine 7.5-minute Quadrangle, 1991; Photorevised 1974. Shaded relief image derived from USGS 1/3 arc-second National Elevation Dataset (NED).

Professional Licenses and Certifications: B.P.E. Olson - PG No. 7923, CEG No. 2429

65

25

35

MAP SYMBOLS

27?

27?

? Contact between map units - Solid where accurately located; short dash where inferred; long dash where approximately located; dotted where concealed; queried where identity or existence is uncertain

Fault - Solid where accurately located; long dash where approximately located; short dash where inferred; dotted where concealed; queried where identity or existence is uncertain. Arrow and number indicate direction and angle of dip of fault plane

Thrust Fault - Barbs on upper plate; solid where accurately located; short dash where inferred; dotted where concealed; queried where identity or existence is uncertain. Arrow and number indicate direction and angle of dip of fault plane

Syncline - Solid where accurately located

Overturned syncline - Solid where accurately located

Anticline - Solid where accurately located; long dash where approximately located; dotted where concealed

Overturned anticline - Long dash where approximately located; dotted where concealed

Antiform - Solid where accurately located

Bentonite bed

Strike and dip of sedimentary beds. Number indicates dip angle in degrees:

Inclined bedding

Vertical bedding

Overturned bedding

Strike and dip of igneous foliation. Number indicates dip angle in degrees:

Inclined foliation

Vertical foliation

Strike and dip of inclined metamorphic foliation. Number indicates dip angle in degrees

Strike and dip of inclined joints. Number indicates dip angle in degrees.

Sample locality showing radiometric age date; may be shown with leader line

25

25

136.4 Ma

SELECTED REFERENCESChapman, A.D., 2012, Late Cretaceous gravitational collapse of the southern Sierra Nevada batholith and adjacent areas above underplated schists, southern California:

Ph.D. dissertation, California Institute of Technology, map scale 1:24,000.

Chapman, A.D., Kidder, S., Saleeby, J.B., and Ducea, M.N., 2010, Role of extrusion of the Rand and Sierra de Salinas schists in Late Cretaceous extension and rotation of the southern Sierra Nevada and vicinity: Tectonics, v.29, no.5.

Chapman, A.D., Luffi, P.I., Saleeby, J.B., and Petersen, S., 2011, Metamorphic evolution, partial melting and rapid exhumation above an ancient flat slab: insights from the San Emigdio Schist, southern California: Journal of Metamorphic Geology, v.29, no.6, p.601–626.

Chapman, A.D. and Saleeby,J.B., 2012, Geologic map of the San Emigdio Mountains, southern California: Geological Society of America, Map and Chart m 101, map scale 1:40,000.

Chapman, A.D., Saleeby, J.B., and Eiler, J., 2013, Slab flattening trigger for isotopic disturbance and magmatic flare-up in the southernmost Sierra Nevada batholith, California: Geology, v.41, no.9, p.1007-1010.

Cole, R.B., and Decelles, P.G., 1991, Subaerial to submarine transitions in early Miocene pyroclastic flow deposits, southern San Joaquin basin, California: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v.103, no.2, p.221–235.

Critelli, S., and Nilsen, T.H., 2000, Provenance and stratigraphy of the Eocene Tejon Formation, Western Tehachapi Mountains, San Emigdio Mountains, and Southern San Joaquin Basin, California: Sedimentary Geology, 136(1), p.7-27.

Dibblee, T.W., Jr., 1973a, Geologic maps of the Santiago Creek, Eagle Rest Peak, Pleito Hills, Grapevine, and Pastoria Creek quadrangles, Kern County, California: U.S. Geological Survey Open File Report 73–57, map scale 1:24,000.

______, 1973b, Stratigraphy of the Southern Coast Ranges near the San Andreas Fault from Cholame to Maricopa, California: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 764.

Dibblee, T.W., Jr. and Minch, J.A. (ed.), 2005, Geologic map of the Grapevine/south 1/2 of Mettler quadrangles, Kern County, California: Dibblee Geological Foundation, Dibblee Foundation Map DF-174, map scale 1:24,000.

Grove, M., Jacobson, C.E., Barth, A.P., and Vucic, A., 2003, Temporal and spatial trends of Late Cretaceous-early Tertiary underplating of Pelona and related schist beneath southern California and southwestern Arizona: Tectonic Evolution of Northwestern Mexico and the Southwestern USA: Geological Society of America, Special Paper 374, p.381-406.

Hall, N.T., 1984, Late Quaternary history of the eastern Pleito thrust fault, northern Transverse Ranges, California: Stanford, California, Stanford University, unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, 89 p., 16 pls., scale 1:6,000.

Hoots, H.W., 1930, Geology and oil resources along the southern border of San Joaquin Valley, California, in Contributions to economic geology: U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 812-D, p. 243-338, scale 1:62,500.

Jacobson, C.E., Grove, M., Pedrick, J.N., Barth, A.P., Marsaglia, K.M., Gehrels, G.E., and Nourse, J.A., 2011, Late Cretaceous–early Cenozoic tectonic evolution of the southern California margin inferred from provenance of trench and forearc sediments: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v.123, nos.3-4, p.485-506.

Keller, E.A., Zepeda, R.L., Rockwell, T.K., Ku, T.L., and Dinklage, W.S., 1998, Active tectonics at Wheeler Ridge, southern San Joaquin Valley, California: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v.110, no.3, p.298–310.

Keller, E.A., Seaver, D.B., Laduzinsky, D.L., Johnson, D.L., and Ku, T.L., 2000, Tectonic geomorphology of active folding over buried reverse faults: San Emigdio Mountain front, southern San Joaquin Valley, California: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v.112, no.1, p.86–97.

Lagoe, M.B., 1987, Cenozoic stratigraphic framework for the San Emigdio Mountains, California, in Davis, T.L. and Namson, J.S., Editors, Structural Evolution of the Western Transverse Ranges: Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists, Book 48A, p. 85–98.

Lancaster, J.T., Hernandez, J.L., Haydon, W.D., Dawson, T.E., and Hayhurst, C.A., 2012, Geologic Map of Quaternary Surficial Deposits, Lancaster 30’ X 60’ Quadrangle: California Geological Survey Special Report 217, Plate 22.

Nilsen, T.H., 1987, Stratigraphy and Sedimentology of the Eocene Tejon Formation, Western Tehachapi and San Emigdio Mountains, California: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1268, map scale 1:62,500.

Nilsen, T.H., Dibblee, T.W., and Addicott, W.O., 1973, Lower and Middle Tertiary stratigraphic units of the San Emigdio and western Tehachapi Mountains, California: U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 1372–H, p.H1–H23.

Pickett, D.A., and Saleeby, J.B., 1993, Thermobarometric constraints on the depth of the exposure and conditions of plutonism and metamorphism at deep levels of the Sierra Nevada batholith, Tehachapi Mountains, California: Journal of Geophysical Research, v. 98, p. 609–629.

Plescia, J.B., Calderone, G.J., and Snee, L.W., 1994, Paleomagnetic analysis of Miocene basalt flows in the Tehachapi Mountains, California: US Geological Survey Bulletin 2100.

Ross, D.C., 1989, The metamorphic and plutonic rocks of the southernmost Sierra Nevada, California, and their tectonic framework: USGS Professional Paper1381, map scale 1:125,000.

Saleeby, J., Farley, K.A., Kistler, R.W., and Fleck, 2007, Thermal evolution and exhumation of deep-level batholithic exposures, southernmost Sierra Nevada, California, in Cloos, M., Carlson, W.D., Gilbert, M.C., Liou, J.G., and Sorensen, S.S., eds., Convergent Margin Terranes and Associated Regions: A Tribute to W.G. Ernst: Geological Society of America Special Paper 419, p. 39–66

Smith, T.C., 1984, Wheeler Ridge and Pleito fault systems, southwestern Kern County, California: California Division of Mines and Geology, Fault Evaluation Report FER-150 (unpublished), scale 1:24,000.

Streckeisen, A.L., 1973, Plutonic rocks – Classification and nomenclature recommended by the IUGS Subcommission on Systematics of Igneous Rocks: Geotimes, v. 18, p. 26–30.

______, 1976, To each plutonic rock a proper name: Earth Science Reviews, v. 12, p. 1–33.

Tedford, R.H., 1961, Fossil mammals from the Tecuya Formation, Kern County, California: Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists, Society of Exploration Geophysicists, American Association of Petroleum Geologists, and San Joaquin Geological Society, Spring Field Trip Guidebook, p. 40-41.

Turner, D.L., 1970, Potassium-argon dating of Pacific Coast Miocene foraminiferal stages: Geological Society of America, Special Paper 124, p.91-129.

Williams, L.A., 1982, Lithology of the Monterey Formation (Miocene) in the San Joaquin Valley of California, in Williams, L.A. and Graham, S.A., Editors, Monterey Formation and Associated Coarse Clastic Rocks, Central San Joaquin Basin, California: Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists, Pacific Section, Volume and Guidebook, p.17-35.

AIR PHOTOS/Digital Imagery

U.S. Department of Agriculture, 1952, Aerial photographs, Flight ABL-21K, frames 14-20, 53-54, 173-177, 193-195, 212-214, black and white, dated 11/18 and 11/25/1952, approximate scale 1:24,000.

U.S. Department of Agriculture, Farm Service Agency–Aerial Photography Field Office, National Agriculture Imagery Program (NAIP), 2012, 1–meter resolution. http://datagateway.nrcs.usda.gov/

U.S. Geological Survey, 1994, Digital Orthophoto Quarter Quadrangle Photos, dated 05/29 and 6/5/1994, Grapevine Quadrangle. (DOQQ and information concerning them can be obtained at http://earthexplorer.usgs.gov/).

_____, 2002, Digital Orthophoto Quarter Quadrangle Photos, dated 06/11/2002, Grapevine Quadrangle. (DOQQ and information concerning them can be obtained at http://earthexplorer.usgs.gov/).

_____, 2008, High Resolution Orthoimagery (HRO), Grapevine Quadrangle, dated 04/29/2008, 1–meter resolution, http://datagateway.nrcs.usda.gov/

_____, 2010, High Resolution Orthoimagery (HRO), Grapevine Quadrangle, dated 04/07/2010, 1–meter resolution, http://datagateway.nrcs.usda.gov/

U.S. Geological Survey, EROS Data Center, 1999, National Elevation Dataset, 1/3 arc second resolution, http://ned.usgs.gov/

APPROXIMATE MEANDECLINATION, 2014

0

0

0

1

1

1.5

.5 2

2

2Thousand Feet

Kilometers

Miles

Scale 1:24,000

Contour Interval 40 feetNational Geodetic Vertical Datum of 1929

5

COTTONWOODCR

SANTA CLARA R

99

Bouquet ResElderberry

Forebay

Castaic Lake

R o s a m o n d L a k e Buckhorn

Lake

Piru Lake

Santa Clara River

Pyramid Lake

Little Rock Wash

Fillmore

Gorman

LakeHughes

Lebec

LeonaValley

Littlerock

Mojave

Piru

QuartzHill

Rosamond

Saugus

Valencia

Acton

Agua DulceCastaic

48

166

58

126

14

138

118°0'0"W118°30'0"W119°0'0"W

35°0

'0"N

34°3

0'0"

N

Mapping completed under STATEMAP

FY 2009-10FY 2009-10

FY 2008-09

PREVIOUS YEARS

CURRENT YEAR

FY 2010-11

FY 2010-11 FY 2010-11

FY 2011-12

FY 2011-12

FY 2012-13

Kilometers

Miles

5

5(L(L(L(Lososososs AAAAngngngngelelelelesesess))))(L(L(L(LLososososs AAAAAngngngngngelelelelesesesese )))))))

(T(T(T(TT(T(Tehehehehehehhacacacacacachahahahahahapipipipipipi))))))(T(T(T(T(T( ehehehehe acacaca hahahahaaapipipipipipi)))))

(T(T(T(T(T(Tehehehehehehacaacacachahahaaapipipipipipipi)))))))l

- Adjacent 30’ X 60’ quadrangles

(Vicctorvvvville))))

mmmma)a)a)a)

uyuyuyuyyamamamam

(C(C(C(C(Cuuuu

GRAPEVINE

FRAZIER

MOUNTAIN

ALAMO

MOUNTAIN

DEVILS

HEART

PEAK

PASTORIA

CREEK

LEBEC

BLACK

MOUNTAIN

COBBLESTONE

MOUNTAIN

WINTERS

RIDGE

LA LI

EBRE

RANCH

LIEBRE

MOUNTAIN

WHITAKER

PEAK

LIEBRE

TWINS

NEENACH

SCHOOL

BURNT

PEAK

WARM

SPRINGS

MOUNTAIN

TYLERHORSE

CANYON

FAIR

MONT

BUTTE

LAKE

HUGHES

GREEN

VALLEY

WILLOW

SPRINGS

LITTLE

BUTTES

DEL

SUR

SLEEPY

VALLEY

SOLEDAD

MOUNTAIN

ROSAMOND

LANCASTER

WEST

RITTER

RIDGE

BISSELL

ROSAMOND

LAKE

LANCASTER

EAST

PALMDALE

FY 2013-14

QuartzSyenite

QuartzMonzonite

QuartzMonzodiorite

Syenite Monzonite Monzodiorite

Granite

Alka

li-feld

spar

Gra

nite

Tonalite

Diorite

Syen

ogra

nite

Granodioriteno

Mnargoz

eti

Quartz

Diorite

90 65 35 10

5

20

60Q Q

A P

60

20

5

Classification of plutonic rock types (from Streckeisen, 1973; 1976). A, alkali feldspar; P, plagioclase feldspar; Q, quartz.

CORRELATION OF MAP UNITS

QU

ATER

NAR

Y

Pliocene

Holocene

Pleistocene

Miocene

TER

TIAR

Y

Oligocene

CEN

OZO

ICM

ESO

ZOIC

PALE

OZO

IC

CR

ETAC

EOU

SJU

RAS

SIC

Eocene

af Qw Qa

Qya

Qpa QfQls

Qyf

Qof

Qvof

QTt

TmgTbc

Ttc

Ttvb Ttva

Ttvd

Ttg

Tse

Ttjm

Ttjl

Ttju

Kle

Kbm

Kg

Kseg

Kpc

Kdc

Kset

|g

Jg

Ks

}|m

Pastoria Plate TSE San Emigdio Schist WSEMC

Tmc

Ttgb

Ksm

Ksu

Tts ?

?

Tt

SURFICIAL UNITS

Artificial fill and disturbed areas (historic, Holocene) – Consists of man-made deposits of earth-fill soils derived from local sources. Mapped specifically along the California Aqueduct structure, debris catchment basins, and includes fill soils along freeway/road alignments.

Wash deposits (late Holocene) – Unconsolidated sand and gravel deposited in recently active stream channels. Deposits are generally derived from local bedrock, or reworked from other local Quaternary sources. Subject to localized reworking and new sediment deposition during storm events.

Modern alluvial fan deposits (late Holocene) – Unconsolidated to weakly consolidated, poorly sorted, gravel, sand, and silt deposits forming active, essentially undissected, alluvial fans. Includes small to large cones at the mouths of stream canyons and broad aprons of coarse debris adjacent to mountain fronts. Gravel clasts are typically unweathered with little to no oxidation. Unit includes local mudflow deposits consisting of massive sandy silty cobble to boulder gravel. (Units Q6 through Q8 of Hall, 1984).

Modern alluvium (Holocene) – Unconsolidated to weakly consolidated, mostly undissected, fluvial gravel, sand and silt. Loose, yellowish-gray sand, silt, and pebble to cobble gravel. Consists predominately of moderately sorted coarse-grained to very coarse-grained arkosic sand.

Ponded alluvium (Holocene) – Unconsolidated to weakly consolidated sand, silt, and clay deposits in closed depressions.

Younger alluvial deposits (middle Holocene to Late Pleistocene) – Unconsolidated thin- to thick-bedded gravel. Deposited in point bar and overbank settings associated with active stream channels.

Landslide deposits (Holocene to Late Pleistocene) – Unconsolidated to moderately well-consolidated jumbled rock debris consisting of surficial failures resulting from soil and rock creep, debris flows, and large-scale rotational rock slides. Recognizable by topographic expression or chaotic internal structure.

Younger alluvial fan deposits (middle Holocene to Late Pleistocene) – Unconsolidated to weakly consolidated, pale brown to dark yellowish brown, silty and coarse to very coarse arkosic sand with pebbles and cobbles, moderately to well-stratified. Gravels are typically clast-supported, oxidized, and primarily from granitic sources, with many sub–rounded friable mafic schist clasts. Silt layers exposed in vertical stream bank cuts show weak prismatic structure. Unit is exposed as slightly dissected, elevated broad alluvial fans and canyon fill along the northern flank of the San Emigdio Mountains. Along the Plieto Fault these deposits are slightly deformed and partially dissected (Units Q4 and Q5 of Hall, 1984).

Older fan deposits (Late to Middle Pleistocene) – Slightly to moderately consolidated, poorly sorted, silty pebbly sand to coarse gravel and boulder fan deposit. Unit is poorly to moderately stratified with a moderately developed Bt horizon up to 0.5m thick (Unit Q3 of Hall, 1984).

Very old fan deposits (Early Pleistocene) –Moderately to well-consolidated, poorly sorted, coarse gravel and boulder fan deposit, highly elevated and dissected.

TERTIARY SEDIMENTARY AND VOLCANIC UNITS

Tulare Formation (Pleistocene to Late Pliocene) – Loosely consolidated light gray boulder conglomerate, conglomeratic sandstone, sandstone, and claystone, non-marine. Conglomerate clasts composed of siliceous (Monterey) shale, sandstone, and basement rocks in gray sandy to clayey matrix, clasts are angular to subangular.

Monterey Formation (Middle to Early Miocene)Gould shale member – White to grayish brown siliceous and semi-siliceous biogenic shale and porcelanite, marine, thin bedded,

platy to fissile, abundant soft-sediment deformational folding, weathers cream to buff, includes thin dolomite layers. Abundant foraminifera indicating Late Saucesian to Relizian age (Dibblee, 1973a; Nilsen et al., 1973).

Clay shale member – Gray clay shale and siltstone, marine, bedded.

Bena Conglomerate (Middle to Early Miocene) – Gray to brown sandy polymictic cobble conglomerate with minor sandstone interbeds, non-marine, massive to crudely bedded, clast-supported, composed of poorly sorted cobbles with some boulders in a weakly consolidated arkosic sand matrix. Interfingers to the west with the Monterey Formation. Deposited with angular unconformity on the Tecuya Formation east of Tecuya Canyon.

Temblor Formation (Early Miocene)Siltstone member – Pale yellow, light gray, light brown siltstone and fine-grained sandstone, marine, massive to locally bedded.

Sandstone member – Gray, light yellow, and yellowish brown fine- to coarse-grained and conglomeratic sandstone, marine, micaceous, locally silty, bedded, locally contains brown spherical boulder-sized concretions.

Tecuya Formation (Early Miocene to late Oligocene)Sandstone and conglomerate member (Early Miocene) – Pale yellow, light yellowish brown, and gray medium- to coarse-grained

and conglomeratic sandstone and sandy pebble to cobble conglomerate, nonmarine, massive to thick-bedded, cemented. Conglomeratic sandstones and conglomerates contain distinctive black subrounded to rounded fine-grained mafic clasts. Local basal boulder conglomerate, clasts up to 3 meters in diameter. Overall, this unit is lithologically similar to the granitic conglomerate member (map symbol: Ttg) but with a higher proportion of sandstone to conglomerate.

Airfall tuff (Early Miocene?) – Hornblende-rich airfall tuff, well-indurated. Unit only occurs on ridgeline between Colorful and Tecuya Canyons, near the Grapevine Thrust Fault, where it appears to be in contact with both Jurassic gabbro (map symbol: Jg) and the lower members of the Tejon Formation (map symbols: Ttju and Ttjl). The nature of these contacts is not readily observable in the field and therefore, the unit is tentatively included with the other volcanic units in the map area, following Chapman (2012).

Basalt flows (Early Miocene) – Black to dark reddish brown aphanitic and locally scoriaceous basalt with basalt breccias/conglomerate, subaerial, local silica-filled amygdules. Outcrops locally exhibit sub-parallel sheet jointing. Interfingers to the west with the sandstone member of the Temblor Formation (map symbol: Tts). In thin section the basalt exhibits pilotaxitic to trachytic texture (Cole and DeCelles, 1991). Breccia and conglomerate facies are poorly-sorted, inversely-graded, matrix-supported, and contain angular to subrounded boulder-sized clasts of thinly bedded aphanitic basalt. K/Ar date of 24.6 ± 2.9 Ma (Turner, 1970).

Dacite tuff and tuff breccia (Early Miocene) – Light gray thin to medium-bedded tuff and gray, pink, and red dacitic tuff breccias, subaerial. Lower portion is 4 to 12 meters of thin-bedded tuff containing fragments of zoned and twinned plagioclase, quartz, biotite, hornblende, porphyritic dacite, and pumice in a vitric groundmass (Cole and DeCelles, 1991). Tuff facies also contains very thin pumice-rich beds. Upper part of unit consists of poorly-sorted, matrix-supported dacite tuff breccia, 1 to 15 meters thick, massive with local inverse grading, porphyritic dacite boulders (up to 4 meters in diameter) are common, locally welded with flattened and deformed pumice fragments. Basal contact is conformable with nonmarine conglomerate member (Ttg). K/Ar dates range from 21.5 ± 0.6 to 21.9 ± 0.7 Ma (Turner, 1970).

Granitic conglomerate member (Early Miocene to late Oligocene) – Interbedded red, green, gray, and brown mudstone, siltstone, sandstone, and pebble to boulder conglomerate, nonmarine, occasional channel scour and fill structures. Conglomerate is primarily composed of granitic and metamorphic clasts, including metavolcanic and quartzite clasts, in a coarse sandy matrix. Occasional interbeds of fossiliferous marine siltstone. Mammalian fossils recovered between Tecuya Creek and Salt Creek are assigned to the early part of the Arikareean Land Mammal Age (Tedford, 1961).

Granitic breccia member (late Oligocene) – Greenish gray boulder cobble conglomerate with minor very coarse-grained to pebbly sandstone, nonmarine. Only found along western edge of map area, discontinuous.

TERTIARY SEDIMENTARY AND VOLCANIC UNITS (continued)

San Emigdio Formation (late(?) to middle Eocene) – Thinly laminated siltstone and silty shale with fine-grained sandstone, marine/lagoonal deposits. Unit is exposed discontinuously throughout the map area and is not formally recognized east of Grapevine Creek. Locally contains molluscan megafossils and foraminifera, as well as carbonaceous and coal-bearing strata. Mapped as the Reed Canyon Siltstone Member of the Tejon Formation by Nilsen (1987) and Dibblee (1973a).

Tejon Formation (middle to early Eocene)Metralla Sandstone Member (middle Eocene) – Silty and fine- to medium-grained sandstone with occasional siltstone interbeds

and minor conglomerate, marine, poorly cemented. Number and thickness of siltstone beds and total unit thickness increase from east to west. Sandstone is typically highly bioturbated, exhibits large-scale cross-stratification, current ripple marks, and contains distinctive spherical calcareous concretions. Typical conglomerate clasts include quartzite, porphyritic volcanic, gneiss, and quartz diorite-granodiorite up to one inch in diameter. Sandstone and conglomerate beds contain locally abundant molluscan megafossils and siltstone beds commonly possess abundant foraminifera.

Live Oak Shale Member (middle to early Eocene) – Laminated to massive shale and mudstone with interlaminated siltstone and minor sandstone interbeds, marine, poorly cemented. Extensively bioturbated by various irregular burrows and borings. Predominately fine to medium sandstone near the upper and lower contacts. Sandstone is commonly graded and exhibits cross-stratification and sole marks suggestive of turbidity flow deposits. Upper and lower contacts are both gradationally conformable. Shale contains abundant foraminifera and occasional invertebrate megafossils.

Uvas Member (middle to early Eocene) – Buff-weathering conglomeratic medium- to coarse-grained arkosic sandstone and cobble conglomerate, marine. Sandstones are typically quartz-rich, well-sorted with medium to large-scale cross-bedding, current ripple marks, and massive bedding. The conglomerate beds contain well-rounded clasts of quartzite and porphyritic volcanic rock, as well as locally derived gneissic, granodioritic, and gabbroic clasts. Locally abundant invertebrate megafossils and foraminifera.

INTRUSIVE AND METAMORPHIC ROCKS – MESOZOIC AND/OR OLDER

Pastoria Upper PlateLebec Granodiorite (Late Cretaceous) – Light gray medium- to coarse-grained biotite granodiorite, locally potassium feldspar

porphyritic, some secondary chlorite and muscovite. Weighted mean U/Pb zircon ages range from 88 to 92 Ma (Chapman, 2012).

Granite of Brush Mountain (Early Cretaceous) – Light colored coarse-grained granite, highly altered, liesegang banding common, forms yellow to orange craggy exposures. Occurs as the uppermost plate of the Pastoria fault system forming extremely altered klippen. U/Pb zircon age of 104.7 ± 0.9 Ma (Chapman, 2012).

Marble (Mesozoic to Paleozoic?) – White to gray medium grained mylonitic to cataclastic marble.

Techachapi-San Emgdio Complex (TSE)Garnet–Biotite Tonalite of Grapevine (Late Cretaceous) – Light-colored fine- to medium-grained, garnet biotite tonalite, foliated.

Garnets range from 3 to 5 mm in diameter. Intrudes Grapevine Canyon paragneiss (Pzg). Correlative to the "garnet tonalite" of the Intrusive suite of Bear Valley in the Tehachapi Mountains and southern Sierra Nevda to the northeast (Saleeby et al., 2007). In thin section, samples have abundant plagioclase, biotite, hornblende, and disseminated small garnets. U/Pb zircon age of 101 ± 1 Ma (Saleeby et al., 2007).

San Emigdio Quartz Diorite Orthogneiss (Early Cretaceous) – Dark colored, medium-grained, hornblende quartz diorite orthogneiss, foliated, locally contains coarse red almandine-rich garnet porphyroblasts up to 3 cm. Unit is located structurally above the Rand Fault and exhibits a strongly attenuated structural fabric characterized by anastomosing ductile to brittle shear zones. Correlative with the "hornblende gabbroids" of the Bear Valley intrusive suite of Saleeby et al. (2007) in the Tehachapi Mountains and southern Sierra Nevada to the northeast. In thin section, samples show biotite-rich shear bands and quartz grains with undulatory extinction. U/Pb zircon age of 105.8 ± 0.6 Ma (Chapman, 2012).

Quartzofeldspathic Gneiss of Pastoria Creek (Early Cretaceous) – Heterogeneous mixture of tonalite, mafic rock, and granodiorite, moderately to strongly layered. Part of the "gneiss complex of the Tehachapi Mountains" described by Saleeby et al. (2007) with a U/Pb zircon age of 112 ± 2 Ma.

Digier Canyon Quartz Diorite Orthogneiss (Early Cretaceous) – Brownish green to black medium-grained hornblende quartz diorite to gabbro orthogneiss, weakly to moderately developed foliation. Similar to Kseg but garnet porphyroblasts are rare. Western continuation of the White Oak diorite gneiss, which is a tectonic mixture of amphibolite to locally greenschist (retrograde) facies dioritic, gabbroic, and mylonitic gneisses representing the lower portion of the "gneiss complex of the Tehachapi Range" described by Saleeby et al. (2007). In thin section, samples have abundant hornblende, subhedral zircons, and weakly-developed polycrystalline quartz ribbons. U/Pb zircon ages range from 105.2 ± 4.2 to 121.3 ± 1.4 Ma (Chapman, 2012).

San Emigdio Tonalite (Early Cretaceous) – Light colored garnet biotite tonalite and trondhjemite, massive to moderately foliated, composed predominantly of plagioclase, quartz, biotite, and reddish pink garnet. Metamorphosed to upper amphibolite facies. In thin section, samples show euhedral epidote phenocrysts embayed in biotite. U/Pb zircon age of 136 ± 2 Ma (Chapman, 2012).

Grapevine Canyon Paragneiss and Grapevine Peak migmatite (Mesozoic to Paleozoic?) – Light to dark brown metasandstone and metapelite, strongly foliated and isoclinally folded, variably migmatized. Occurs as pendants within TSE complex. Contains mainly plagioclase, quartz, potassium feldspar, biotite, red garnet, and graphite, with large (1-3 cm) tabular muscovite pseudomorphs after kyanite (Pickett and Saleeby, 1993). Correlative with the "migmatitic paragneiss" at the structural base of the "gneiss complex of the Tehachapi Mountains" (Saleeby et al., 2007).

San Emigdio SchistMetasandstone (Late Cretaceous) – Light blue to dark gray coarse-grained metapsammite, quartzite, and quartzofeldspathic schist,

massive to well-foliated, highly sheared. Metasandstone member characterized by the peak mineral paragenesis of garnet + plagioclase + biotite + quartz ± muscovite ± kyanite (Chapman, 2012). Garnets typically occur as idoiblastic grains ranging from 1 to 5 mm. Grades from upper amphibolite to epidote-amphibolite facies. Occasional deformed quartzofeldspathic veins are visible in outcrops. The San Emigdio Schist represents forearc trench sediments deposited between 98 and 102 Ma, subducted to a depth of 30 to 35 km, and exhumed to upper crustal levels between 89 and 93 Ma (Grove et al., 2003; Jacobson et al., 2011, Chapman et al., 2013). In thin section, metasandstone samples have elongate quartz grains with undulatory extinction and subhedral garnet porhyroblasts with blebby quartz inclusions. Primary micas show uniform orientation.

Metabasalt (Late Cretaceous) – Dark brown to greenish black metabasalt, commonly black and white polka-dotted to striped texture, commonly bimineralic with amphibole and plagioclase. Plagioclase porphyroblast composition typically ranges from An17 to An35 (Chapman, 2012). Diopsidic and augitic clinopyroxenes occur proximal to the Rand Fault. Appears as small, irregular bodies within map unit Ks.

Ultramafic (Late Cretaceous) – Light to dark green talc and actinolite schist bodies, massive, waxy, associated with map unit Ksm.

Western San Emigdio Mafic Complex (WSEMC)Gabbro (Jurassic) – Light purple to green fine- to medium-grained gabbro, olivine gabbro, and hornblende gabbro, massive to

strongly foliated. Locally pervasive alteration of pyroxene to amphibole (Chapman, 2012).

DESCRIPTION OF MAP UNITS

af

Qw

Qa

Qya

Qyf

Qf

Qpa

Qls

Qof

Qvof

QTt

Tmg

Tmc

Tbc

Tt

Tts

Ttva

Ttc

Ttvb

Ttvd

Ttg

Ttgb

Tse

Ttjm

Ttjl

Ttju

Kle

Ksu

Ksm

Ks

Kg

Kbm

Kdc

Kseg

Kpc

Kset

}|m

Jg

|g

Preliminary Geologic Map available from:http://www.conservation.ca.gov/cgs/rghm/rgm/preliminary_geologic_maps.htm