From the Islands to the Mountains: A 2020 View of Geologic Excursions in Southern California
This volume includes five geologic field-trip guides in the Los Angeles region associated with the 2020 GSA Cordilleran Section Meeting that was scheduled for May 2020, in Pasadena, California. The guides are organized in a generally counterclockwise order around the Los Angeles Basin. The first guide by Burgette et al. provides new slip rates, age constraints, and observations of the active Sierra Madre fault zone that borders the northern side of the San Gabriel and San Fernando Valleys. The Nourse et al. guide takes a new look at the San Gabriel Mountains from a basement and geomorphologic perspective. Further west, Keller et al. provide one of the first published field-trip guides focused on the 9 January 2018 Montecito debris flows that caused 23 deaths. The volume then moves south to Santa Cruz Island, where Davis et al. provide an updated review of the island’s geology within the California borderlands. The final guide returns to the east, where Platt et al. present the unique geology of Santa Catalina Island with a focus on the subduction-related Catalina Schist.
Montecito debris flows of 9 January 2018: Physical processes and social implications
*corresponding author: Edward Keller; [email protected]
-
Published:May 18, 2020
-
CiteCitation
Edward Keller, Chandler Adamaitis, Paul Alessio, Erica Goto, Summer Gray, 2020. "Montecito debris flows of 9 January 2018: Physical processes and social implications", From the Islands to the Mountains: A 2020 View of Geologic Excursions in Southern California, Richard V. Heermance, Joshua J. Schwartz
Download citation file:
- Share
ABSTRACT
Montecito, California, has a complicated Quaternary history of debris flows, the most recent being the Montecito debris flows of 9 January 2018, which were wildfire-debris flow–linked events that took 23 lives and damaged or destroyed several hundred homes. Relative flow chronology, based on boulder weathering, incision rates, and soil dates with limited numerical (radiocarbon and exposure) dating, is used to identify paths of prehistoric debris flows. Topography of debris flow fans on the piedmont is significantly affected by the south-side-up reverse Mission Ridge fault system. Examination of weathering rinds from Pleistocene debris flows confirms that the Rattlesnake Creek–Mission ridge debris flows are folded over the ridge, and that lateral propagation linked to uplift of marine terraces (uplift rate of ~0.5–1 m/k.y.) significantly altered debris flow paths. As communities continue to rebuild and live in these hazard-prone areas, disaster risk reduction measures must take into account both spatial and temporal components of vulnerability.
This field guide includes four stops from Montecito to Santa Barbara. The first stop will be to observe debris flow stratigraphy over the past ~30 ka beneath an earthquake terrace and a prehistoric Chumash site on the beach near the Biltmore Hotel in Montecito. The second stop will be at San Ysidro Creek in San Ysidro Canyon, the site of the largest Montecito debris flow that occurred on 9 January 2018. We will discuss source area and processes of the debris flow, and take a short hike up the canyon to visit the debris flow basin and a ring net designed to reduce the future hazard. The final two stops will explore the debris flow chronology of Santa Barbara over the past ~100 ka. Figure 1 shows the location of the field-trip stops. There is no road log as field sites can be found with a search on a smartphone.
- atmospheric precipitation
- boulders
- California
- Cenozoic
- chronology
- clastic sediments
- debris flows
- earthquakes
- Eocene
- erosion
- faults
- field trips
- fires
- folds
- geomorphology
- marine terraces
- mass movements
- Matilija Formation
- Paleogene
- Pleistocene
- Quaternary
- rills
- risk assessment
- risk management
- road log
- Santa Barbara California
- Santa Barbara County California
- sediments
- shore features
- Southern California
- stratigraphy
- terraces
- Tertiary
- topography
- United States
- uplifts
- weathering
- weathering rinds
- Mission Ridge fault system
- Montecito California
- Juncal Shale
- Montecito debris flows 2018
- San Ysidro Canyon