Various mélange types occur within the Franciscan accretionary Complex of western California. The largest mélange body, called the Central Belt Mélange (or similar names) served earlier as the type example for the orogen-long, subduction channel model, yet in the northwestern San Francisco Bay Area the name does not accurately reflect the geology. The mélange designation was commonly applied where resistant exotic and native blocks of rock are scattered across a relatively smooth terrain. Detailed mapping shows that many blocks experienced post-accretion transport. Areally large rock masses previously designated as Central Belt Mélange consist of multiple units and less than 30% of the tectonostratigraphy is mélange. Weakly metamorphosed sandstone–mudrock broken to dismembered formational units and similarly deformed sandstone–mudrock submarine fan facies dominate the tectonostratigraphy. Subordinate mélanges of the northwestern San Francisco Bay Area are of tectonic or sedimentary origin. The sedimentary bodies represent submarine mass flow deposits. Tectonic mélanges mark Mesozoic subduction-zone faults or Cenozoic strike-slip faults. Discriminating between mélange types and their origins, and reconstructing tectonostratigraphic columns for major fault blocks, clarifies the primary accretionary complex architecture and reveals significant along-strike variations in the Franciscan subduction accretionary Complex.
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Research Article|
September 11, 2024
Deconstruction of the Franciscan Complex Central Terrane Mélange and re-evaluation of Franciscan mélanges and architecture of the northwestern San Francisco Bay Area, California, USA
Loren A. Raymond
Correspondence: [email protected]
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Correspondence: [email protected]
Publisher: Geological Society of London
Received:
15 May 2024
Revision Received:
10 Jul 2024
Accepted:
19 Jul 2024
First Online:
29 Jul 2024
Online ISSN: 2041-479X
Print ISSN: 0016-7649
© 2024 The Author(s). Published by The Geological Society of London. All rights, including for text and data mining (TDM), artificial intelligence (AI) training, and similar technologies, are reserved
© 2024 The Author(s)
Journal of the Geological Society (2024) 181 (6): jgs2024-102.
Article history
Received:
15 May 2024
Revision Received:
10 Jul 2024
Accepted:
19 Jul 2024
First Online:
29 Jul 2024
Citation
Loren A. Raymond; Deconstruction of the Franciscan Complex Central Terrane Mélange and re-evaluation of Franciscan mélanges and architecture of the northwestern San Francisco Bay Area, California, USA. Journal of the Geological Society 2024;; 181 (6): jgs2024–102. doi: https://doi.org/10.1144/jgs2024-102
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Index Terms/Descriptors
- accretion
- accretionary wedges
- block structures
- California
- deformation
- facies
- faults
- Franciscan Complex
- genesis
- mapping
- melange
- Mesozoic
- metaigneous rocks
- metamorphic rocks
- metamorphism
- metasomatic rocks
- plate tectonics
- rock masses
- San Francisco Bay region
- sediment transport
- sedimentary rocks
- serpentinite
- strike-slip faults
- subduction
- subduction zones
- systems
- tectonostratigraphic units
- terranes
- transport
- United States
- Mount Tamalpais
- Coyote Ridge
- Nicasio Reservoir
- Central Belt Melange
- Roy's Redwoods
- Tamarancho shear zone
- Liberty Gulch Melange Member
- Ring Mountain Melange
- Jenner Headlands
- Rocky Point Melange
Latitude & Longitude
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