Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

New Idria serpentinite protrusion, Diablo Range, California: From upper mantle to the surface

April 30, 2022

The New Idria serpentinite body in the Coast Ranges of California is a diapir that resulted from the interaction of the migrating Mendocino trench-ridge-transform fault triple junction, transpression, metasomatic fluids, and previously subducted oceanic crust and mantle. Northward propagation of the San Andreas fault progressively eliminated the original subduction zone, allowing seawater to penetrate into the formerly subducting abyssal peridotite mantle, triggering serpentinization. The associated physical changes in density, volume, and strength yielded an expanding, buoyantly rising serpentinite protrusion, facilitated by transpression along the San Andreas fault. Sedimentary facies and intrusion of minor cross cutting syenite and alkali basalt dikes indicate that the serpentinization-driven diapir buoyantly rose and widely breached the surface by ca. 14 Ma, attending migration of the Mendocino Triple Junction past the latitude of New Idria.

Publication Year 2022
Title New Idria serpentinite protrusion, Diablo Range, California: From upper mantle to the surface
DOI 10.2475/04.2022.01
Authors Robert G. Coleman, Jared T. Gooley, Robert T. Gregorory, Stephan A. Graham
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title American Journal of Science
Index ID 70232912
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Geology, Energy & Minerals Science Center