Geologic Mapping in the Southern Pacific Border and Sierras provinces, California
San Andreas Fault
This project uses geologic and geophysical mapping to build an earth-science framework for scientific investigations that include assessments of critical resources, such as groundwater, and of hazards, such as those resulting from earthquakes, in California west of and including the Sierra Nevada and Cascade arc.
Questions of particular interest include:
What are the geometries, slip rates, and connectivity of faults throughout the broader San Andreas fault system? How do these faults affect resource quantity and quality? How do these factors contribute to the behavior of faults as earthquake sources?
How have basins and landscapes evolved through time? How has this evolution affected resource quantity and quality? Can we use this knowledge to better understand processes related to hazards and resources?
How are rocks and sediments of different properties distributed at the Earth’s surface and in the upper crust? How does this distribution affect resource quantity and quality? How does this distribution affect propagation of seismic energy and ground shaking?
Science Issue and Relevance
Earthquakes, Faulting and Tectonics
Determining how fast faults move through time, how they are connected at depth and at the surface, the style of deformation, and the distribution of rocks with different densities and seismic velocities relate directly to societally relevant questions of how to forecast shaking damage, the size of potential earthquakes, and where faults may rupture.
Basin stratigraphy, structure, and resources
Basins preserve the record of the tectonic evolution, unroofing and sedimentation of California; their structural and stratigraphic underpinnings are essential components for understanding availability and quality of natural resources, particularly water, oil, and gas, as well as understanding how seismic energy propagates in the subsurface and basin effects that concentrate shaking in certain areas.
Surface and Groundwater Resources
Surface water and groundwater serve as water supplies for urban populations, agriculture, and native habitats within California. The combination of rapid population growth, high water use, and arid climate has led to an increased dependence on groundwater resources, resulting in locally severe groundwater depletion and declining groundwater levels. Management of surface-water and groundwater resources in the province requires knowledge of the groundwater system, which in turn requires an understanding of the configuration and properties of aquifers. Such understanding includes the delineation of water-bearing units on the basis of lithology and hydraulic properties, and the construction of 2D and 3D hydrogeologic frameworks.
Methodology to Address Issue:
New geologic mapping will build on previous studies to address topical research problems with collaborating partners. New mapping and compilation will be at various scales (from 1:24,000 to 1:400,000), chosen as appropriate for the purpose of the mapping. Geologic mapping will be augmented by a variety of supporting information including whole-rock geochemistry and paleomagnetic data. Geochronology, such as argon dating, uranium-lead dating, thermochronology, microstratigraphy, and cosmogenic techniques, is essential to date offset features that provide slip rates as well as document timing of uplift. Petrography and microstructural studies of fault and associated mélange rocks are critical methods to translate mapped units to properties that influence fault behavior.
To project these data into the subsurface, geologic cross sections and geophysical data (such as gravity, magnetic, microearthquakes, well data) are essential. For 3D geologic mapping focused on addressing ground-water issues, work will be at the basin scale and focused on water-bearing strata in the upper 1-2 km of the crust. This will involve such elements as defining basin stratigraphy, creating digital 3D distribution of permeabilities and other properties, predicting the location and influence of faults, and evaluating basin evolution within the overall tectonic framework of the region. Techniques used will include geophysical methods (such as gravity and magnetic), basin stratigraphic analysis, structural analysis, and the constraints of regional tectonostratigraphic settings. Digital 3D models can better use semiquantitative geologic data in a predictive sense to build a parameterized model of an aquifer system. GIS and 3D methods of data visualization and analysis will be employed for overlaying and interpreting multiple data sets.
For regional 3D geologic maps focused on addressing seismic hazards, we look to improve the standard methodology in several ways, including subdivision of basement using gravity/magnetic models, using additional stratigraphic horizons to guide and constrain seismic velocity interpolation, and creating seamless 3D models. To assess the robustness of the geologic and velocity models, we will develop ways to compare and analyze various tomographic and 3D seismic velocity models derived from the 3D geologic maps and make data-intensive calculations more efficient.
Results:
2-D geologic map compilations
2-D geologic map compilations integrate the best available mapping across a large area of regional interest. This integrated depiction of the distribution and orientation of geologic materials and structures at the Earth's surface provides vital input into both the basin-scale and the upper-crustal scale 3-D geologic maps, as well as directly informing regional questions of fault interconnectivity, long-term slip history, and sense of offset.
3-D hydrogeologic frameworks:
3-D hydrogeologic frameworks include the shape of the groundwater basin (often modeled using gravity data), faults that bound and pass through the basin deposits, and stratigraphic and textural information. Examples of hydrogeologic frameworks produced from an earlier incarnation of this project include the Cuyama Basin (north of Santa Barbara) and the Santa Rosa Plain (northern San Francisco Bay area). Because of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA) passed by the California state legislature in 2014, increased demand for these frameworks for groundwater modeling has led to work that spans much of California from the Eel River basin near Eureka in the north to the San Antonio basin near Vandenberg Air Force base in the south.
Using mapping to understand how certain rock types affect how faults slip:
Along the boundary between the Central Valley and the northern California Coast Ranges, rocks have been uplifted to expose old fault zones that are lined with highly sheared serpentinite (the state rock of California). Elsewhere, undeformed and unserpentinized parent rock (which once underlaid an ancient ocean) is exposed. By mapping the textures of these rocks one can infer how these rocks became weaker as the rocks were dissolved, broken up and crushed, and began to shear and slip, with implications of how this process changes the strength of the fault through time.
Where does right-lateral slip go east of the Sierra Nevada?
The San Andreas fault is the most famous member of a system of faults that accommodate right-lateral slip between the North America and Pacific tectonic plates, but other faults can be just as important, especially when they cause large earthquakes. On the east side of the Sierra Nevada is a system of right-lateral and extensional faults called the Walker Lane. Where this slip goes north of Lassen volcano is the subject of debate. We use remote sensing of the magnetic properties of rocks to look the amount of right-lateral offset, such as for the area north of Burney Falls (shown in map below).
Development of 3D geologic and property models:
In the Sacramento Delta of northern California, bringing together relationships of geologic units mapped at the surface, descriptions of rock types encountered in gas wells, logs of electrical and seismic velocity, and geophysical data such as gravity and magnetic data lays a foundation for building a 3D model of the geology. Such a model consists of surfaces of major faults (top panel) and various geologic map units into various flavors of basin fill and basement rocks (middle panel). The 3D model becomes the framework for assigning seismic velocities (how fast sound energy propagates through these rocks) to the subsurface (bottom panel) that can be used to predict ground shaking from future earthquakes.
Below are data or web applications associated with this project.
Gridded gravity, magnetic, and pseudogravity data of the Sierra Nevada, California and Nevada
Channel steepness and chi data for part of the northern San Francisco Bay Region including parts of the Russian River and Cache Creek watersheds, northern California
Digital Data for a Three-Dimensional Geologic Map of the San Andreas Fault Zone Between Gold Hill and Pinnacles National Park, California
Gravity, density, and magnetic property measurements of the Sierra Nevada, California and Nevada
Digitized sonic velocity and density log data of Sacramento Valley, California
Sonic velocity and density well logs in the Sacramento Valley in California were digitized by hand. These logs are available as scanned files (pdfs and tiffs) on the California Division of Oil, Gas, and Geothermal Resources website and the data consist of transit times and bulk density measured downhole in oil and gas wells in the region. Sonic velocity and density data were also compiled from a n
Data supporting the construction of the Three-Dimensional Geologic Map and Geology-based Seismic Velocity Model of the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta and surrounding region, California
Geologic Map Schema (GeMS) version of Wentworth, C.M., Knudsen, K.L., and Witter, R.C., 2023, Quaternary deposits of the 9-county San Francisco Bay Region
Digital database for the geologic map along the southern Bartlett Springs fault zone and adjacent area between Cache Creek and Lake Berryessa, Northern Coast Ranges, California
Gravity, aeromagnetic, magnetic potential, and physical property data of the Bartlett Springs fault zone and surrounding areas, California
Quaternary deposits of the 9-county San Francisco Bay Region: an areally continuous digital map database prepared from Knudsen and others (2000) and Witter and others (2006)
Gravity data of southern Washoe County and adjacent areas, Nevada and California
Aeromagnetic and derivative gridded data, and magnetization boundaries of northeastern California
Below are maps associated with this project.
Aeromagnetic map of northeastern California
Geologic and geophysical maps of the Stockton 30’ × 60’ quadrangle, California
Geologic and geophysical maps of the Santa Maria and part of the Point Conception 30'×60' quadrangles, California
Below are publications associated with this project.
Neogene faulting, basin development, and relief generation in the southern Klamath Mountains (USA)
Development and evaluation of models for tectonic evolution in the Cascadia forearc require understanding of along-strike heterogeneity of strain distribution, uplift, and upper-plate characteristics. Here, we investigated the Neogene geologic record of the Klamath Mountains province in southernmost Cascadia and obtained apatite (U-Th)/He (AHe) thermochronology of Mesozoic plutons, Neogene graben
Integrated geologic and geophysical modeling across the Bartlett Springs fault zone, northern California (USA): Implications for fault creep and regional structure
The rate and location at depth of fault creep are important, but difficult to characterize, parameters needed to assess seismic hazard. Here we take advantage of the magnetic properties of serpentinite, a rock type commonly associated with fault creep, to model its depth extent along the Bartlett Springs fault zone, an important part of the San Andreas fault system north of the San Francisco Bay,
Near surface sediments introduce low frequency noise into gravity models
Geology along the Yuba Pass and Highway 70 corridors: A complex history of tectonics and magmatism in the northern Sierra Nevada
Achieving sub-nanoTesla precision in multirotor UAV aeromagnetic surveys
Insights into the geometry and evolution of the southern San Andreas Fault from geophysical data, southern California
Hydrogeologic characterization of the San Antonio Creek Valley watershed, Santa Barbara County, California
Hydrologic and geochemical characterization of the Petaluma River watershed, Sonoma County, California
Geologic framework of Mount Diablo, California
Global biotic events evident in the Paleogene marine strata of the eastern San Francisco Bay area, California
Comment on ‘New insights on Franciscan Complex geology, architecture, depositional age, and provenance for the western Mt. Tamalpais area, Marin County, California’ by Bero et al. (2020)
Implementation plan for the southern Pacific Border and Sierra-Cascade Mountains provinces
gravmagsubs: Gravitational and magnetic attraction of 3-D vertical rectangular prisms
Below are partners associated with this project.
This project uses geologic and geophysical mapping to build an earth-science framework for scientific investigations that include assessments of critical resources, such as groundwater, and of hazards, such as those resulting from earthquakes, in California west of and including the Sierra Nevada and Cascade arc.
Questions of particular interest include:
What are the geometries, slip rates, and connectivity of faults throughout the broader San Andreas fault system? How do these faults affect resource quantity and quality? How do these factors contribute to the behavior of faults as earthquake sources?
How have basins and landscapes evolved through time? How has this evolution affected resource quantity and quality? Can we use this knowledge to better understand processes related to hazards and resources?
How are rocks and sediments of different properties distributed at the Earth’s surface and in the upper crust? How does this distribution affect resource quantity and quality? How does this distribution affect propagation of seismic energy and ground shaking?
Science Issue and Relevance
Earthquakes, Faulting and Tectonics
Determining how fast faults move through time, how they are connected at depth and at the surface, the style of deformation, and the distribution of rocks with different densities and seismic velocities relate directly to societally relevant questions of how to forecast shaking damage, the size of potential earthquakes, and where faults may rupture.
Basin stratigraphy, structure, and resources
Basins preserve the record of the tectonic evolution, unroofing and sedimentation of California; their structural and stratigraphic underpinnings are essential components for understanding availability and quality of natural resources, particularly water, oil, and gas, as well as understanding how seismic energy propagates in the subsurface and basin effects that concentrate shaking in certain areas.
Surface and Groundwater Resources
Surface water and groundwater serve as water supplies for urban populations, agriculture, and native habitats within California. The combination of rapid population growth, high water use, and arid climate has led to an increased dependence on groundwater resources, resulting in locally severe groundwater depletion and declining groundwater levels. Management of surface-water and groundwater resources in the province requires knowledge of the groundwater system, which in turn requires an understanding of the configuration and properties of aquifers. Such understanding includes the delineation of water-bearing units on the basis of lithology and hydraulic properties, and the construction of 2D and 3D hydrogeologic frameworks.
Methodology to Address Issue:
New geologic mapping will build on previous studies to address topical research problems with collaborating partners. New mapping and compilation will be at various scales (from 1:24,000 to 1:400,000), chosen as appropriate for the purpose of the mapping. Geologic mapping will be augmented by a variety of supporting information including whole-rock geochemistry and paleomagnetic data. Geochronology, such as argon dating, uranium-lead dating, thermochronology, microstratigraphy, and cosmogenic techniques, is essential to date offset features that provide slip rates as well as document timing of uplift. Petrography and microstructural studies of fault and associated mélange rocks are critical methods to translate mapped units to properties that influence fault behavior.
To project these data into the subsurface, geologic cross sections and geophysical data (such as gravity, magnetic, microearthquakes, well data) are essential. For 3D geologic mapping focused on addressing ground-water issues, work will be at the basin scale and focused on water-bearing strata in the upper 1-2 km of the crust. This will involve such elements as defining basin stratigraphy, creating digital 3D distribution of permeabilities and other properties, predicting the location and influence of faults, and evaluating basin evolution within the overall tectonic framework of the region. Techniques used will include geophysical methods (such as gravity and magnetic), basin stratigraphic analysis, structural analysis, and the constraints of regional tectonostratigraphic settings. Digital 3D models can better use semiquantitative geologic data in a predictive sense to build a parameterized model of an aquifer system. GIS and 3D methods of data visualization and analysis will be employed for overlaying and interpreting multiple data sets.
For regional 3D geologic maps focused on addressing seismic hazards, we look to improve the standard methodology in several ways, including subdivision of basement using gravity/magnetic models, using additional stratigraphic horizons to guide and constrain seismic velocity interpolation, and creating seamless 3D models. To assess the robustness of the geologic and velocity models, we will develop ways to compare and analyze various tomographic and 3D seismic velocity models derived from the 3D geologic maps and make data-intensive calculations more efficient.
Results:
2-D geologic map compilations
2-D geologic map compilations integrate the best available mapping across a large area of regional interest. This integrated depiction of the distribution and orientation of geologic materials and structures at the Earth's surface provides vital input into both the basin-scale and the upper-crustal scale 3-D geologic maps, as well as directly informing regional questions of fault interconnectivity, long-term slip history, and sense of offset.
3-D hydrogeologic frameworks:
3-D hydrogeologic frameworks include the shape of the groundwater basin (often modeled using gravity data), faults that bound and pass through the basin deposits, and stratigraphic and textural information. Examples of hydrogeologic frameworks produced from an earlier incarnation of this project include the Cuyama Basin (north of Santa Barbara) and the Santa Rosa Plain (northern San Francisco Bay area). Because of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA) passed by the California state legislature in 2014, increased demand for these frameworks for groundwater modeling has led to work that spans much of California from the Eel River basin near Eureka in the north to the San Antonio basin near Vandenberg Air Force base in the south.
Using mapping to understand how certain rock types affect how faults slip:
Along the boundary between the Central Valley and the northern California Coast Ranges, rocks have been uplifted to expose old fault zones that are lined with highly sheared serpentinite (the state rock of California). Elsewhere, undeformed and unserpentinized parent rock (which once underlaid an ancient ocean) is exposed. By mapping the textures of these rocks one can infer how these rocks became weaker as the rocks were dissolved, broken up and crushed, and began to shear and slip, with implications of how this process changes the strength of the fault through time.
Where does right-lateral slip go east of the Sierra Nevada?
The San Andreas fault is the most famous member of a system of faults that accommodate right-lateral slip between the North America and Pacific tectonic plates, but other faults can be just as important, especially when they cause large earthquakes. On the east side of the Sierra Nevada is a system of right-lateral and extensional faults called the Walker Lane. Where this slip goes north of Lassen volcano is the subject of debate. We use remote sensing of the magnetic properties of rocks to look the amount of right-lateral offset, such as for the area north of Burney Falls (shown in map below).
Development of 3D geologic and property models:
In the Sacramento Delta of northern California, bringing together relationships of geologic units mapped at the surface, descriptions of rock types encountered in gas wells, logs of electrical and seismic velocity, and geophysical data such as gravity and magnetic data lays a foundation for building a 3D model of the geology. Such a model consists of surfaces of major faults (top panel) and various geologic map units into various flavors of basin fill and basement rocks (middle panel). The 3D model becomes the framework for assigning seismic velocities (how fast sound energy propagates through these rocks) to the subsurface (bottom panel) that can be used to predict ground shaking from future earthquakes.
Below are data or web applications associated with this project.
Gridded gravity, magnetic, and pseudogravity data of the Sierra Nevada, California and Nevada
Channel steepness and chi data for part of the northern San Francisco Bay Region including parts of the Russian River and Cache Creek watersheds, northern California
Digital Data for a Three-Dimensional Geologic Map of the San Andreas Fault Zone Between Gold Hill and Pinnacles National Park, California
Gravity, density, and magnetic property measurements of the Sierra Nevada, California and Nevada
Digitized sonic velocity and density log data of Sacramento Valley, California
Sonic velocity and density well logs in the Sacramento Valley in California were digitized by hand. These logs are available as scanned files (pdfs and tiffs) on the California Division of Oil, Gas, and Geothermal Resources website and the data consist of transit times and bulk density measured downhole in oil and gas wells in the region. Sonic velocity and density data were also compiled from a n
Data supporting the construction of the Three-Dimensional Geologic Map and Geology-based Seismic Velocity Model of the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta and surrounding region, California
Geologic Map Schema (GeMS) version of Wentworth, C.M., Knudsen, K.L., and Witter, R.C., 2023, Quaternary deposits of the 9-county San Francisco Bay Region
Digital database for the geologic map along the southern Bartlett Springs fault zone and adjacent area between Cache Creek and Lake Berryessa, Northern Coast Ranges, California
Gravity, aeromagnetic, magnetic potential, and physical property data of the Bartlett Springs fault zone and surrounding areas, California
Quaternary deposits of the 9-county San Francisco Bay Region: an areally continuous digital map database prepared from Knudsen and others (2000) and Witter and others (2006)
Gravity data of southern Washoe County and adjacent areas, Nevada and California
Aeromagnetic and derivative gridded data, and magnetization boundaries of northeastern California
Below are maps associated with this project.
Aeromagnetic map of northeastern California
Geologic and geophysical maps of the Stockton 30’ × 60’ quadrangle, California
Geologic and geophysical maps of the Santa Maria and part of the Point Conception 30'×60' quadrangles, California
Below are publications associated with this project.
Neogene faulting, basin development, and relief generation in the southern Klamath Mountains (USA)
Development and evaluation of models for tectonic evolution in the Cascadia forearc require understanding of along-strike heterogeneity of strain distribution, uplift, and upper-plate characteristics. Here, we investigated the Neogene geologic record of the Klamath Mountains province in southernmost Cascadia and obtained apatite (U-Th)/He (AHe) thermochronology of Mesozoic plutons, Neogene graben
Integrated geologic and geophysical modeling across the Bartlett Springs fault zone, northern California (USA): Implications for fault creep and regional structure
The rate and location at depth of fault creep are important, but difficult to characterize, parameters needed to assess seismic hazard. Here we take advantage of the magnetic properties of serpentinite, a rock type commonly associated with fault creep, to model its depth extent along the Bartlett Springs fault zone, an important part of the San Andreas fault system north of the San Francisco Bay,
Near surface sediments introduce low frequency noise into gravity models
Geology along the Yuba Pass and Highway 70 corridors: A complex history of tectonics and magmatism in the northern Sierra Nevada
Achieving sub-nanoTesla precision in multirotor UAV aeromagnetic surveys
Insights into the geometry and evolution of the southern San Andreas Fault from geophysical data, southern California
Hydrogeologic characterization of the San Antonio Creek Valley watershed, Santa Barbara County, California
Hydrologic and geochemical characterization of the Petaluma River watershed, Sonoma County, California
Geologic framework of Mount Diablo, California
Global biotic events evident in the Paleogene marine strata of the eastern San Francisco Bay area, California
Comment on ‘New insights on Franciscan Complex geology, architecture, depositional age, and provenance for the western Mt. Tamalpais area, Marin County, California’ by Bero et al. (2020)
Implementation plan for the southern Pacific Border and Sierra-Cascade Mountains provinces
gravmagsubs: Gravitational and magnetic attraction of 3-D vertical rectangular prisms
Below are partners associated with this project.