Abstract: Miocene Palinspastic Restoration of Southwestern California
FRITSCHE, A. EUGENE, California State University, Northridge, CA 91330-8266
Previous models that attempted to restore southwestern California to
its pre-Miocene configuration fell short of the goal because three constraints
of the geologic data base were not adhered to in constructing the model.
First, published paleomagnetic data from the western Transverse
Ranges
indicate that the amount of clockwise rotation increases from ~37 degrees
in the San Gabriel Mountain block to ~130 degrees in the Point Conception
area. This means that prior to rotation, the western
Transverse
Ranges,
which are now relatively straight, were bent at an ~90 degree angle. Second,
rocks that are presently on opposite sides of the San Gabriel fault need
to be backrotated along the fault and must not lose contact with the fault
surface. Third, the Mesozoic rocks in the Santa Monica Mountains must be
restored to a position immediately north of their truncated counterparts
at the northern end of the Santa Ana Mountains. These constraints are incorporated
into a new model by (1) back-rotating the San Gabriel block ~37 degree
in a counterclockwise direction; (2) closing the gap created by Miocene
transrotational extension by back-sliding the Santa Monica Mountains rocks
along the curved San Gabriel fault in a counterclockwise, rotational, left-slip
direction across the eastern Los Angeles basin until the Mesozoic rocks
in the Santa Monica and Santa Ana Mountains are juxtaposed; and (3) bending
the rocks in the westernmost
Transverse
Ranges, west of the Santa Monica
Mountains, in an additional ~90 degree counterclockwise back-rotation until
they come into contact with the southern California coast. When these three
steps are completed, the Eocene forearc basin deposits of the San Diego
and western
Transverse
Ranges areas are restored into straight alignment
with the Eocene forearc basin
deposits to the north in the San Rafael and Sierra Madre areas, as would
be expected with forearc basin geometry. This new model shows that the
San Gabriel fault was not created initially as an early transform fault
of the San Andreas system, but was initiated as a curved fault surface
by the rotation process.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90935©1998 AAPG Pacific Section Meeting, Ventura, California