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Field and petrographic reconnaissance of Franciscan Complex rocks of Mount Diablo, California; imbricated ocean floor stratigraphy with a roof exhumation fault system

John Wakabayashi
Field and petrographic reconnaissance of Franciscan Complex rocks of Mount Diablo, California; imbricated ocean floor stratigraphy with a roof exhumation fault system (in Regional geology of Mount Diablo, California; its tectonic evolution on the North America Plate boundary, Raymond Sullivan (editor), Doris Sloan (editor), Jeffrey R. Unruh (editor) and David P. Schwartz (editor))
Memoir - Geological Society of America (September 2021) 217: 155-178

Abstract

Franciscan subduction complex rocks of Mount Diablo form a 8.5 by 4.5 km tectonic window, elongated E-W and fault-bounded to the north and south by rocks of the Coast Range ophiolite and Great Valley Group, respectively, which lack the burial metamorphism and deformation displayed by the Franciscan complex. Most of the Franciscan complex consists of a stack of lawsonite-albite-facies pillow basalt overlain successively by chert and clastic sedimentary rocks, repeated by faults at hundreds of meters to <1 m spacing. Widely distributed melange zones from 0.5 to 300 m thick containing high-grade (including amphibolite and eclogite) assemblages and other exotic blocks, up to 120 m size, form a small fraction of exposures. Nearly all clastic rocks have a foliation, parallel to faults that repeat the various lithologies, whereas chert and basalt lack foliation. Lawsonite grew parallel to foliation and as later grains across foliation. The Franciscan-bounding faults, collectively called the Coast Range fault, strike ENE to WNW and dip northward at low to moderate average angles and collectively form a south-vergent overturned anticline. Splays of the Coast Range fault also cut into the Franciscan strata and Coast Range ophiolite and locally form the Coast Range ophiolite-Great Valley Group boundary. Dip discordance between the Coast Range fault and overlying Great Valley Group strata indicates that the northern and southern Coast Range fault segments were normal faults with opposite dip directions, forming a structural dome. These relationships suggest accretion and fault stacking of the Franciscan complex, followed by exhumation along the Coast Range fault and then folding of the Coast Range fault.


ISSN: 0072-1069
Coden: GSAMAQ
Serial Title: Memoir - Geological Society of America
Serial Volume: 217
Title: Field and petrographic reconnaissance of Franciscan Complex rocks of Mount Diablo, California; imbricated ocean floor stratigraphy with a roof exhumation fault system
Title: Regional geology of Mount Diablo, California; its tectonic evolution on the North America Plate boundary
Author(s): Wakabayashi, John
Author(s): Sullivan, Raymondeditor
Author(s): Sloan, Doriseditor
Author(s): Unruh, Jeffrey R.editor
Author(s): Schwartz, David P.editor
Affiliation: California State University, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Fresno, CA, United States
Affiliation: San Francisco State University, Department of Earth and Climate Science, San Francisco, CA, United States
Pages: 155-178
Published: 20210907
Text Language: English
Publisher: Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
ISBN: 9780813782171
References: 116
Accession Number: 2021-060534
Categories: Igneous and metamorphic petrologyStructural geology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. sect., geol. sketch maps
N37°52'54" - N37°52'54", W121°54'50" - W121°54'50"
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2021, American Geosciences Institute.
Update Code: 2021

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