TERTIARY PETROLOGY IN THE COLINGA DISCTRIC, CALIFORNIA
Transcription
TERTIARY PETROLOGY IN THE COLINGA DISCTRIC, CALIFORNIA
TERTIARY PETROLOGY IN THE COLINGA DISCTRIC, CALIFORNIA h ¦ iHtki s. a¦ ¦ an ¦ am M att H -- - - r -=«*¥^. « V^J*^ .%*£#* MEBT OF B~CI;V t". -^1". F r1 T C B!r-GBES OF « R, ?>« Head, / February, 19S4* AFPBOVKD mi TNBAB& iP?:-07 35 FOB COM-IV Table of Contents. Introduction .».**•**»••*«**»* h trict Beueription of the Ooali • of formations Description • &venal e\rrtr.one shale Kreyenbagen 7:m*.*i !5-irgarita fnl&re foraation i'erti&ry strata « •«••*.*»* *•••»..«••• 6 ...»*•••*•*• ******** *»»»•••*#••»* 19 in nalgkbariag sirens • bless of the hstaw minerals » » • «« * • * »•••.*•*?•* Conditions is iqpMiting basin ~J List of •«•»• **«*«..»»».«** lt*fta©p9rtlßg agents Saaaary 13 15 "r;* Source 10 ****•*•**.*•• Geologic history of the Coalinga district during tli© Tertiary .•••••..»•••«•* The S 5 fora&iioa group Etahagola • 1 ••••**«**•*• ? Tsafclor foraation » • ef cons lns lons .*.»«? »•****•*** 21 24 3€ 37 44 47 §S MNf* Piste 1. reap of r i ry district Geologic .oallnga • •••••« tod of Text* Plate ll* Soluat r aatMM of forsatiana i*i _ Ii t rict ****** 1 te ........ 111* Sir'ietoorre~.-€*oti€«i across Coallnga Districtv- r phs ?"late IV* !:ier- •#••««* « Tafelaa* v 'o-r?:O'T .ri .iG iwy Saa&ary liuertl data **«***»** ........ « « » « & 1• "I TERTIARY PETROLOGY IH THE OOALISGA DISTRICT, CALIFORNIA. INTRODUCTION. An investigation, begun to determine the possible utility of the heavy minerals of the Tertiary rocks of California in correlating formations and parts of formations, has led to a study of the relations of those minerals in the history of the series this paper are presented of formations chosen a description based of samples In an ac- from them, and a dis- on data obtained from a study of some hundreds taken from these formations, heavy minerals stages as a type. of the formations, count of the history that may be deduced cussion, to the different to the various In the descriptive stages in a tynical cycle of erosion. portion of the paper, summary of the chief geographic features southern part of the Coalinga district formations is discussed following a brief of the region, - each - the of the Tertiary under the following heads: a. Structural and stratigraohic b. General account of the relations of the relations; of the fauna and flora; Petrography of specimens chosen to illustrate the more important lithologic phases of the formation. Most of the statements about faunas and floras are derived either from earlier published accounts of the Coalinga district F**A.Anderson, A stratigraphic study in the Mount Diablo Range, California, Proc. Calif. Acad. Dei., 3d ser., Geology, vol 2, No« 2, 1905, VV> 156-206. F.!!.Anderson, A further stratigraphic study in the *'ount Diablo Range of California, Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci., 4th ser., volT 3, 1908, pp. 1-40. Arnold and Anderson, Geology and oil resources of the Coalinga district, California, Bull. U.S. Geol. Survey, No. 398, 1910. Nomland, J.0., The Etchegoin Pliocene of Middle California, Univ. Lif. ?üb., Geology, Vol. 10, Ho. 14, 1917, pp. 191-254. 2 with varioms paleontologists. or from conversations ments concerning the other aspects The state- of the formations are based on data that have for the most part either become known or been of the field and laboratory verified in the course In this part of the paper, and in which this paper is based. which follows it, the heavy mineral con- the historical account are mentioned of the formations tents petrographic characteristics only incidentally, as from which certain obvious deduc- interest can be made. tions of paleogeographic of the paper is given over to a discussion nected '/=ith the heavy mineral assemblages ion in the various Tertiary formations Description Coalinga of the study upon of the problems con- and their distribut- of the district. District: The Coalinga district includes a somewhat in the foothills along The remainder the western ley in Fresno and Kings Counties, indefinite area edge of the San Joaquin val- California. I hen viewed from a high point, on Joaquin Ridge to the north, for example, the area is seen to which attention is chiefly directed to consist dissected in this paper of three or four distinct parts: hilly area a much are many ridges with a trend par- in allel to that of the mountains - Reef Ridge and Kreyenhagen Hills; a plain a few miles wide running parallel to and immediately northeast of the hilly area man Plain and Pleasant Valley; beyond tinuous belt of hills about miles wide - the just mentioned - the Kettle- the plain a nearly con- thirty miles long and five or six Kettleman Hills; a series of steep alluvial 3 fans merging gradually into the San Joaquin valley. belts are cut through by a considerable stream channels, creeks number of usually dry of which the most important, from south to north, may be named: Jacalitos, The hilly V»altham f Avenal, Big Tar, Garza, Canoas, and Los Gates Creeks. a few cottonwood there are dwarf pines, Along some of these are growing. trees Zapato, On the higher hills oaks, junipers and chaparral. er hills and plains are covered with -grass, ing most of the year, and sagebrush. The low- dry and brown dur- A few springs, either near the foot of the mountains located or inhere a stream channel cuts through an anticlinal ridge, furnish mineral water out the year. The region is characterized through- by hot, rainless summers and pleasantly cool winters during which there is an extremely variable rainfall, which may amount on the average to five or six inches. The rocks that underlie the region (See Plates III)are distributed as follows: dipping, hard Cretaceous sandstone, soft sandstone, flat-lying, but otherwise toward and Kettleman Hills, Tertiary age; in the plains, deposits the last. exposed and both ordinary and valley; in the Kreyenhagen more gently folded beds of sand, and sand, and various meta- shale or diatomite, all dipping 50 to 80 degrees the San Joaquin yotmger and shale steeply group; in the higher foothills, morphic rocks of the Franciscan siliceous in the Diablo Range, sandstone older Tertiary conglomerate, I, IIand and shale of of alluvial gravel similar in appearance to In the Kettleman Hills an immense anticlinal fold to view a few thousand feet of late Tertiary rocks, 4 very similar to the upper portion of the series exposed in the Kreyenhagen Hills. Ilie structure is thus that of a broad mono- cline of Tertiary rocks resting against the pre-Tertiary forma- tions that make up the Diablo Range; the monoclinal structure being interrupted by the great Kettleman Hills anticline, and toward the north, near Coalinga, The structure contains of the region north and west of Coalinga, which the oil and Anderson, by some other folds and faults. fields, has been described but will be passed over here. in detail by Arnold It is in general R. Arnold and R. Anderson, op. cit. similar to the part of the district already described. DESCRIPTION OF FORMATIONS Avenal Sandstone: . 5 The Tertiary section along Reef Ridge has at the base sev- in some eral hundred feet of yellow, white and brown sandstone, beds of which occur marine invertebrate fossils of Eocene age. This formation, called by F. M. Anderson the Avenal sandstone, (as may is faulted out at the western end of Reef Ridge, where be seen in Jasper tact against Canyon) Miocene strata rest with a fault con- dark Cretaceous Spring Canyon, however, It is present shale. and is continuous in Sulphur from there about 30 miles to the end of Reef Ridge. southeast At the spring which forms the head of Little Tar Creek, in the midst of an area complex structure and poor outcrops, Santa Hangar ita shale. studied The sandstone by the may be advantageously in Big Tar Canyon, where it has its usual dip of about 75 degrees toward the northeast. glomeratic zone rests Cretaceous sandstone. Kreyenhagen from ordinary Cretaceous At its upper in Tar Canyon as elsewhere, that rocks and limit the forma- into the diatomaceous shale. The fauna of the Avenal sandstone consists chiefly mollusks, of many species. Smith has shown that the nearest subtropical. against Farther west it rests upon strata may possibly be earlier Eocene. tion grades, Its f ossiliferous basal con- with a slight angular discordance are different in appearance tebrates, it is over-lapped of 110 vertebrate of marine Professor inver J. P. living forms are tropical or fossils or plants anpear to have J.P.Smith, Climatic Relations of the Tertiary and Quaternary Faunas of the California Region. Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci. Fourth Ser. Vol. IX, Ho. 4, 1919, pp. 123-173. 6 along Reef Ridge. been discovered Coalinga, however, ornia, as in the with shale of Eocene age, interbedded al beds of poor coal occur. ;!t. A few miles northwest of sever- in Calif- Similar beds elsewhere Diablo region, have yielded an interesting flora of laurels, magnolias, forms that must have and other lived in a warm, rainy climate. The lithology of the Eocene along Reef Ridge is rather and more uniform than that of higher clastic forma- simpler with well-rounded Near Tar Canyon a brown sandstone tions. igneous pebbles of kinds known in the Coast Ranges only as con- occur at the base. stitutents of Cretaceous of white, yellow and brown sandstone places The higher strata are conglomerate/. the brownish sandstone of rather with calcareous seen to occur as large concretionary masses In other places it seems common than darker-colored varieties, less resistant. In places, of Tar Canyon, shaly members in white sandstone. In general, is probably more but less well seen because as, for example, about a mile south are exposed. One of the most comspicuous sandstone In may be cement to occur as uniform beds. however, all along Reef Ridge white sandstone brownish calcareous fine grain. members of the formation is the with abundant fossils. A speci- men of this phase from the Tar Canyon region was chosen for detailed petrographic surface, study. the most conspicuous In thin sections, features or on a polished to be seen, are arity of the grains and the large amount of cement Fig. 1). the angul- (Plate IV, The grains are for the most part rather uniform in 7 about among the smaller ones are occasional size, but scattered grains of much larger size, which are, likewise, not well rounded. Because each grain is surrounded from its content nearly opaque by calcareous of ferruginous cement which is material, it is difficult to distinguish quartz and untwinned feldspar in a Scattered thin section. grains of fresh plagioclase ever, be recognized, with occasional variety of feldspar, and rare grains of accessory A specimen ment with dilute hydrochloric cular instance very turbid grains of some by treat- The loss in this parti- acid. The exact amount to 62 percent. amounted minerals. was disintegrated of this sandstone may, how- would no doubt vary within wide limits, depending on the proportion of shell fragments in the particular specimen the heavier being about Studies of the lighter minerals showed larger grains are noticeably worn. quartz, feldspar feldspar plagioclase makes up fully portion of the but by no means all of it. Of the altered grains that can be referred ies of feldspar, are rare pinite, and A considerable is more or less altered, of the whole. The minerals present Gontrary to expectations, half of the detrital grains. 1% that only some of the unstria* ted feldspar, plagioclase, muscovite. The re- into two portions by treat- sidue of sand and silt was separated ment with bromoform, chosen. to a definite spec- the majority are orthoclase. ost of the is strikingly fresh, although it contains, enough of the anorthite molecule than that of quartz. to have an index noticeably higher Among the minerals heavier than bromo- 8 form, zircon, magnetite, tourmaline, green amphibole and basaltic hornblende In most samples the last two very sparingly. sandstone no araphiboles Kreyenhagen also occur, of the Avenal occur. Shale: The distribution of the Kreyenhagen shale along Reef Ridge In fact, the is very similar to that of the Avenal sandstone. two were Epidote, and rutile are most abundant. tentatively as members classed by Arnold and Anderson. The Kreyenhagen of a single formation is in general about twice as thick as the Avenal, and is nearly everywhere muddy, frequently oil-stained Canyon the Kreyenhagen diotemite. appears shale with several sandstone v. est of Sulphur Spring to be represented by a clastic beds, which contain a fairly large marine fauna, not yet studied. Fossils in the rest of the forma foraminifera, tion along Reef Ridge are limited to occasional many diatoms, a rather and fish scales. There are a few calcareous len ses and nodules in some localities which may, upon close study, yield a larger fauna. One such nodule will be described The upper limit of the Kreyenhagen is beautifully exposed Above the surface at several is an erosion surface is a bed a few inches sidered to be and the conglomerate thick composed of peb- with gypsum. bed resting upon it are con- evidence of a break in sedimentation, bably of at least a brief emergent which places near Big Tar Canyon. bles of siliceous shale and other rocks cemented This surface below. interval. ity is marked by a thick conglomerate and pro- The unconform- and considerable dis- 9 cordance in dip in the region of the Coalinga anticline, ten miles north of Coalinga. shale, except a very few The fossils in the Kreyenhagen mollusks, have not yet been studied in any detail. formation grades stated into clastic shale, with marine That the fossils, as above, at the west end of Reef Ridge, seems not to have been not£d by previous observers. The diatoms of the diatomite facies have been studied only in a casual manner. fera appear been passed to have usual to find Vertebrate nodules associated It is not un- by entirely. bones in the calcareous with diatomaceous shales The foramini- lenses and in California, but none are known to have been found in Kreyenhagen. at present, therefore, There is little to be said about the fauna and flora of the formation. To illustrate the petrography the diatomite and of the calcareous Two sections matrix. spar. in the fine-grained with sev- siliceous Both show rare clastic grains of angular quartz or feld The limestone foot in diameter, came from a spheroidal of Big Tar Canyon. section of this rock showed disappointingly areas of colorless of find mud. A thin little. calcite and rare sections minifera the whole slice consists with an abundance concretion about a which was found about 50 feet below the top of the formation a mile southeast rounded One is gray, the other relatively clear, of foraminifera of variety will be described. of the former show much variation. muddy and nearly opaque; eral sections of the formation .samples Aside from of fora- of very fine-grained calcite Angular detrital grains of 10 quartz or feldspar occur very sparingly. fragment with dilute hydrochloric mud rock which could be reduced Upon dissolving a acid, it changed the fingers. to mud between By washing away the finest mud and separating to a soft bromoform a small amount of the heavier constituents cured. sponge They consist spicules, with the residue chiefly of pyritized diatoms, and irregular grains and masses were se- pyritized of pyrite. There are also crystals of zircon, rutile and kyanite, but minerals. none of ferromagnesian Two or three fairly large grains of an unknown blue mineral of high relief and variable optical character were noticed. been found only in samples This mineral has previously of the Simpson formation from Okla- Its identity is not yet certainly known. homa. The Temblor Formation: shale occurs a sandstone Above the Kreyenhagen several hundred feet thick. this formation makes as Reef Ridge. Busane Peak the conspicuous It outcrops between Jasper and for about a mile at the southeast feature known of and Zapato end of the ridge, of the Temblor fail, and the crest of the ridge is made by other formations. H topographic from the small hill just west of At two places, stent members the re; i the to erosion to the head of Little Tar Creek, a distance nearly 25 miles. Creeks, By its resistance formation These resistant members, Reef Beds*, occur near the middle of the formation, as mapp- ed by Arnold and Anderson, tempts to trace but are themselves a single bed show fairly continuous, that lenticular. the ridge crest, is made first by one, then by another, At- though of 11 These beds are alike in being somewhat the resistant strata. conglomeratic and highly fossiliferous, ous cement. A typiGal sample The other strata low. , with abundant calcare- from one of them is described be- of the formation do not differ notice- ably from the usual type of sandstone in other formations of They are soft, yellowish or whitish and moderate- the region. ly fine-grained. The upper limit of the Temblor has not previously been de- During the present fined. investigation, however, typical Santa Margarita fossils have been found at three localities in a conglomeratic member in the upper part of the sandstone previously mapped are: on as Temblor ("Vaqueros"). the northwest These localities slope of Busane Peak, just above the main Reef Bed; in Garza Canyon, 100 feet or so above Reef Bed; and at the point where the Aeablor ceases crest of Reef Ridge, four miles southeast The presence gests places the main to form the of Big Tar Canyon. of these fossils and of a conglomerate horizon at three widely separated group at the same along the ridge sug- strongly that the unconformity is general for the region, and that along with the overlying diatomite, doubtfully referred by Arnold and Anderson to the Santa Margarita, some of the underlying clastic rocks must also be referred to that epoch. The fossils of the Temblor are marine invertebrates many species. Conspicuous now considered to designate Vaqueros. among them is Turritella ocovana, a horizon younger The Reef Ridge "Vaqueros" alent to the type Vaqueros of is thus not faunally equiv- of the Salinas fore called Temblor, as suggested than the typical Valley, and is there- by F. M. Anderson. In gen- 12 eral, the fossils are poorly preserved Reef Ridge, but excellent examples some others of Turritella ocoyana and In addition to the were noted in Garza Canyon. one or two bones of higher vertebrates marine invertebrates been found. in the Temblor along have No plant fossils have been found in this area. To illustrate the petrography of the formation, a sample top of the 2558-foot hill immediately the Reef Bed, from the This specimen northwest of Big Tar Canyon was selected. is typical of all the Reef Beds, and, so far as the accessory erals are concerned, for all the samples formation chiefly in the character and polished surfaces and fine grains and shall fragments in abundant about little rounding. min- of the formation that It differs from other portions of the have been examined. Thin sections of calcite cement. Compared and abundance of cement. of the rock show coarse scattered promiscuously Even the larger grains show with the Tejon sample previously des- cribed, the Reef Bed contains more large grains, more grains of turbid feldspar, and more white mica. which are extremely rare in all the samples grains of amphiboles, examined from the Eocene A fragment There are also scattered beds of the Coalinga district. of the specimen broke down rapidly in dilute hy- drochloric acid, with a loss of a little more than 50 per cent. The residue was separated form. coarse, into two parts by treatment The light fraction, which makes up poorly sorted white sand. 99>i with bromo- of the whole, is a Even with the naked eye many grains of muscovite and turbid feldspar grains are angular, with little evidence can be seen. of wear. All the Under the 13 polarizing microscope, to rather more than the sand may be seen 50$. Of the feldspar to consist of feldspar grains about half are fairly fresh, and of the fresh grains somewhat more than half with indices higher than 1.54, the refract- are of plagioclase ive index of an immersion fluid in which the grains were examined. The quartz grains are chiefly of the type with "irregular" in- clusions, as defined by Hackle, though "regular" ones also oc- . Jackie, Bdin. The sands and sandstones of Eastern Moray, Trans. Geol. Soc. VII, 1896, p. 148. In the fraction of higher density than bromoform there are cur. minerals, many ferromagnesian and brown amphibole, chief among them glaucophane, basaltic hornblende, jagged ends, and magnetite; there pyroxene green grains with are also grains of zircon, tour maline, garnet of various colors, and epidote. the similar fraction from the Avenal sandstone Compared with this assemblage is highly distinctive. Saata Margarita Formation Overlying the Temblor all along Reef Ridge is a variable formation, about 1000 feet thick, consisting of sandstone and shale at the base, and shale at the top. diatomite in the middle, and sandstone The basal conglomerate has already been mentioned. stone and of many spherical derived, It consists pebbles of this formation of fragments of various igneous in all probability, from the Cretaceous of sand- rocks, conglomerate. The diatomite is whiter and harder than most of that in the Kreyenhagen, and contains more calcareous lenses and nodules. 14 The shale and sandstone ied separately above the diatomite has not been stud- from the Etchegoin strata. The upper limit of the formation was, in fact, left in doubt by the earlier mapping, but has been defined for the northwestern . Nomland part of the area bf J. 0. Nomland, op. cit., p. 201. The fossils of the formation are varied: gigantic forms, Tamiosoma gregaria, Ostrea titan, etc., in the basal conglomersome unidentified gastropods ate; beds of the siliceous shale; many unidentified Foraminifera and diatoms, both in calcareous and siliceous parts tion; and some unidentified vertebrate bones, in calcareous and pelecypods likewise in the calcareous than diatoms have been described of the forma- bones, probably whale No fossil plants other beds. from the formation in this area. In the Mt. Diablo region, however, a good flora of broad -leaved trees has been collected from beds of the same age. Inasmuch as the lithology of the upper and lower parts of the formation are practically indistinguishable from that of the underlying and overlying strata, attention will be limited here to the diatomite. Compared to the Kreyenhagen, Margarita diatomite is whiter, harder, the Santa with less clastic mat- erial and less indication of oil, and has much more calcareous material in the form of beds, lenses, and nodular concretions. This material is light or dark gray on a fresh fracture, but weathers ally. yellow. Some specimens have been studied petrographic- Thin sections usually show little except an extremely 15 fine-grained mass of calcite, in which there are a few diatoms and foraminifera, feldspar. with occasional angular grains of quartz or One section showed many small, angular grains of quartz and feldspar and some sections solution of the calcareous Upon of small mollusks. material in hydrochloric acid, the residue is a fine silt, much less muddy than that left from the samples of Kreyenhagen. of quartz and feldspar, The light minerals are angular with many diatoms. are pyrite, zircon, garnet, magnetite, grains The heavy minerals green hornblende and ba- saltic hornblende. Etchegoin Group: Above the Santa Margarita formation in the Kreyenhagen Jacalitos Hills there are about 7000 feet of sandstone and shale. The uoper half of the formation is excellently exposed the Kettleman Hills. Anderson, Etehegoin. and also in This group of rocks was, by Arnold and divided into two formations, - the Jacalitos Nomland holds, on the other hand, and that it is really a single formation, which he calls the Etchegoin group. For the purpose more advantageous, the study, Nomland* s views are the of the present and will be adopted. group with special reference to the be found in Nomland *s admirable paper, A detailed study of invertebrate fauna may "The Etchegoin Pliocene of California." J. 0. Nomland, op. cit. A brief description that should do justice to so thick and variable a group of rocks as this one would obviously be an im- 16 The group contains possibility. and colors: calcareous resistant beds, cross-bedded or fresh water fossils; drab, cross-bedded shale pebbles, occasional sandy, bedding planes the group nevertheless oolitic limestone, limestone of considerable beds and many pebbles of other kinds. Shell limestone, nodu- It has some conglomerate In addition to these more common varieties some striking beds of white, voland some beds high in gypsum. The group contains an abundance papers, has lime- almost at random through strata scattered some lignitic streaks, The invertebrates ent kinds. With a and beds of structureless extent. of rock, the group contains canic ash, concretions. of several different kinds: lar limestone, The shales are usually without fossils or calcareous minor amount of limestone, some with shells, or with strewn with shells. limy, clayey, and gypsiferous, stone beds sands, some with scattered but often with ironstone thin with various marine, brackish water, reddish and brown strata angular blue sand- concretions, with different kinds of conspicuous stone beds of all kinds sandstone of fossils of many differ- have been the subject of several The vertebrates, notably those of Arnold and Nomland. most of them from the area north of Coalinga, have been described in a series of papers plants do not appear to a few definite horizons. suggest varied immensely at any one time. assemblages to of silicified wood and bark, large- like the lithological varieties, onments The fossil They appear to have been described. consist mainly of fragments ly restricted by J. C. Merriam. The organic remains, that the local envir- The faunal and floral accordingly differ so much because of ecological 17 factors that their chronological cult to determine. al temperatures, The marine invertebrates subtropic- suggest the brackish and fresh water invertebrates lower temperature, a the fossil wood and gypsum partial aridity, a land area with an abundance and the vertebrates attempt implications have been diffi- will be made later to harmonize of grass. these somewhat An conflict- ing data. An adequate account of the petrography It must suffice here merely would probably req\iire a volume. to discuss briefly three samples freshwater of prominent lithologic types: vivianitic; the brownish formerly considered the blue sandstone of the Etchegoin bed (Lower Mya zone of Arnold and Anderson) fotind about 2000 feet below the top of the formation; and the blue clay shale which forms a good deal of the upper 1500 feet of the formation. strata The blue sandstone in places; occurs in cross-bedded 20 or more feet thick. They are found chief- ly in the upper middle portion of the group. about equal amounts of quartz, gray coating on the surface, and of dark grains Attempts to scrape bright blue. of scattered the examination. the phosphate of chert and of a similar coating, off enough of the coating for optical study were unsuccessful, presence shows either clear or with a thin turbid feldspar which, from the presence appear A sample because of the grains of fine silt which interfered with It was this silt, probably, that furnished in the early analysis which gave rise to the vivi- anite hypothesis. A later analysis, cited by Anderaon and Pack, Anderson and Pack, Geology and Oil Resources of the ..est Border of the San Joaquin Valley, North of Coalinra, California. Bulletin 603, U.S.Geol. Survey, 1915, p. 82-83. 18 is said to show that the coating is composed mainly of silica, alumina, and ferric iron, with no phosphate. suggest, however, that These writers the alumina and iron in this analysis may have come from some of the grains and not from the coatPerhaps ing. the silica did the same. that the coating is composed was secondarily deposited decomposition in the sandstone, of the that of fine volcanic water in which the sand or of clayey material resulting from the of portions of the sand." is known either in favor of or against ceivable hypotheses, however, of opal or chalcedony, dust that settled on the surface was being deposited, They suggest, Ho definite evidence these or any other con- and the problem must be left for the pre- sent as an insoluble mystery. The phase ish, arenaceous, of the Lower Mya zone chosen for study is a brownoolitic limestone, and sand grains have served in which minute gastropods as nuclei, (Plate IV, Fig. 4). The oolites are unusually large (pisoli tic) and some of them show traces of both concentric and radial structure. The minerals serving as nuclei include quartz, feldspar, chert, and some ferromagnesian minerals. This oolitic bed offers some analogies the oolites now forming in Great Bait Lake. with The oolitic phase was found only in a single place, although the fossilif erous brown sandstone bed of which it forms a part was traced several miles in the northern part of the Kettleman Hills. It occurs a hundred feet or so above the highest horizon at which Kulinia, an abundant mollusk in lower strata, was found. It gives the 19 suggestion earliest of the coming of lacustrine conditions in t c San Joaquin basin. of the blue clay that forms much of the upper A specimen part of the Etchegoin was studied, without very striking results. The clay broke down to a flocculent mass upon being eoaked By panning away the clay material, minor amounts water. rounded erals were found.. Not enough of them were obtained of any foraminif era. a part of the lighter material, covered Gypsum forms as may be seen with a lens on It is probably the presence of the clay. this mineral that causes to make a Examination of the clay material good crop of heavy minerals. a fresh fracture of grains of quartz and a few other min- small but somewhat failed to show the presence in the outcrops of to "slack", and become with a loose, porous coating of mud to a depth of about two feet. The examination information that serves failed to give any definitely to suggest the conditions Some other data bearing on the problem of its deposition. will be mentioned of this shale below, under Geologic History. The Tulare Formation: Overlying the Atchegoin group of strata of unconformity is a dominantly ies with a maximum thickness, lacustrine and fluviatile ser- as measured in the Kettleman Hills, of 31GC feet. the Etchegoin which persists by Arnold and Anderson »* boundary between sandstone and Tulare is drawn at the baee of I throughout in most exposures the associated without evidence the r.ettleman hills, and which ie filled with shells of minute gastropods. strata larger shells, chiefly pelecypods, In also 20 lacustrine types, are found in abundance. as marine Inasmuch shells have been found in only one higher horizon at one localshells are found in probably only one lower ity, and freshwater horizon, this conspicuous 10,000 feet of Pliocene bed serves strata very well to divide the of the region into two portions: a dominantly marine lower portion, 7000 feet thick, and a domin- The upper upper portion about half as thick. antly freshwater portion is presumably Robles formation, at least in part equivalent which occupies an analogous to the Paso position in the Salinas Valley section. Lithologically, the Tulare formation differs from the Itchegoin chiefly in the abundance the sand and clay strata. of gravel interbedded with and dis- A study of the character tribution of the gravel in the Kettleman and Kreyenhagen Hills yielded some suggestive facts, which may be summarizec here. map, In the first place, as is shown even by the topographic the basal Tulare beds outcrop here and there, especially the Kreyenhagen Hills, as prominent groups of hills. group fronts Big Tar Canyon; another farther northwest or so northeast in front of Canoas of Dagany Gap; and coarser ities. graye 1£ shows is situated a few miles Canyon; a third a mile A field examination that they have much thicker beds gravel than do corresponding This fact suggests dumped One such a fourth, the Guijarral Hills, eight miles east of Coalinga. these hilly areas at the mouths in of of horizons at other local- that the hills may be simply the of Pliocene a little further light on the matter, streams. examinations To throw of the con- 21 stituents of the gravels in these the hills in front of Canoas blocks of Cretaceous and various Canyon, Tertian hills were made. the pebbles are almost all or igneous pebbles sandstone, that must have come from the Cretaceous In beds; conglomerate they are just the kinds of material most abundant along Canoas Creek now. In the Guijarral Hills on the other hand, as in the north end of the Kettleman Hills in general, the pebbles are largely red and greenish cherts derived from the Franciscan. In gen- eral, the studies indicate that the pebbles in each area are exactly of the kinds that are now being brought down by the streams that flow nearest likely, therefore, ancestors that these of the present gravel deposits fact mentioned by Arnold and Anderson, Tulare gravel beds, a is of much interest. in them of Eocene and Miocene sandstone additional evidence angular concordance among the various members their deposition was not everywhere unconformities described above, and perhaps probably be still more apparent could examine Tertiary strata blocks. of the Reef Ridge continuous. The some others, would than they are at present the marginal portions of the formations, tions now removed It that in spite of the This fact furnishes section, were made hy the streams. One other fact In regard to these is the occurrence It appears the hills in question. if w© the por- by erosion. in neighboring areas: Along Reef Ridge, then, and in the Kreyenhagen and Kettle- man Hills, the Tertiary group of rocks consists of at least 13,000 feet of strata, dominantly sandstone shale, with and 22 two thick diatomite formations. Before turning to the geologi- cal history deducible strata, say something from these in regard to the changes are traced short distances Hills area, it will be necessary found in them when they along the strike. In the Alcalde immediately north of waltham Creek, and only a few miles from the western part of Reef Ridge, the section is so different that the exact relation of its various components those described made out. to for the Reef Ridge section has not yet been strata, The Eocene for example, with beds of coal; the Kreyenhagen stone; to the very existence to be definitely proved; are largely shale, has a good many beds of sand- of femblor strata can hardly be said the Santa Margarita by a foot or two of conglomerate is represented only found in a single spot; the lower Itchegoin seems to be terrestrial; is only a few hundred feet thick, and the upper Etchegoin In general, as compared with the Reef Ridge section, the formations in Alcalde Hills appear to be either non-marine, or marginal; they have fewer fossils and, measured by thickness of strata cut out, greater uncon- formities. When one examines the corresponding strata east of the Alcalde Hills, in the neighborhood anticline, he finds still other conditions: ten miles northof the Coalinga the Eocene is here twofold, a lower shale series and an upper one of sandstone; Kreyenhagen and Temblor again resemble the corresponding forma- tions along Reef Ridge, but with some striking differences; Temblor is overlain by a formation composed of serpentine the the de- 23 tritus, the "Big Blue", the stratigraphic rendered relations of which are doubtful by an entire lack of marine fossils; Margarita is entirely clastic, sils; and the Etchegoin with several the Santa zones of giant fos- is again largely, but not entirely, ter- restrial in origin. Southward from those crosses from Reef Ridge, conditions are equally different found along that ridge. In fact, every time one an important zone of faulting, such as those along Alcalde Canyon, Los Gatos Creek, or Avenal Creek, he/ls likely to find himself In a new Tertiary section. Coast Ranges is broken into fault-blocks, to have been elevated and depressed or less independently of the others. This portion of the each of which appears during Tertiary time more The stratigraphic and sedi mentational problems resulting from this complex diastrophic his- tory are of course sent discussion extremely difficult. as much as possible, attention is drawn almost entirely, both in the preceding deductive discussion Reef Ridge. To simplify the pre- descriptive portion and in the that is to follow, to the conditions along 24 GEOLOGIC HISTORY OF The pebbles THE COALINGA DISTRIC DURING THE TERTIARY. in all the Eocene conglomerate of kinds that could have come from Cretaceous of those characteristic of the Franciscan. are of the extremely stable species beds studied are rocks, with none The heavy minerals that would be expected to survive more than one cycle of weathering and transportation. The relation of the Eocene formity with moderate gest that the Eocene up of slightly naj have Cretaceous ness of the Cretaceous that covered pre -Cretaceous been bordered by lands made strata. The known great thick- in miles, makes it Eocene time the area So far as the available evid- it may be assumed that the source Eocene detritus was a land area probably somewhere of the present Coast Ranges, slightly consolidated, Professor composed Cretaceous of moderately also that folded, strata. represent- fauna are tropical species. the known floras of the California Eocene, both of the Heganos and Tejon divisions, are of species must have required not only a high temperature ly high annual rainfall, 40 inches or more. therefore, that but also a fairIt seems probable, that the weathering of the detrital materials now found in the Eocene formations must have ditions of high temperature orable of the in the region J. P. Smith has shown that the living atives of the Eocene invertebrate He states tributary the Coalinga district may have had no rocks exposed. ence goes, therefore, one of uncon- is such as to sug- formations, measured easy to believe that throughout to the sea Cretaceous, angular discordance, sea folded to the and humidity, to chemical decomposition taken place under con- such as would be fav- of the rocks. Under these 25 circumstances the high percentage specimens of the Coalinga Eocene undoubted Tejon from Tejon Ranch, of feldspar found in various (as well as in specimens of south of Bakersfield) becomes a difficult problem. In general, two possibilities are suggested The first is that in addition to the Cretaceous are known to have furnished materials may have been an additional source by the facts. rocks to the Eocene of feldspathic which sea there materials. This possibility is not favored by any other facts, such as the existence in the Eocene of rare minerals different from those of the Cretaceous additional source, assumed itely eliminated. that might have come from the rocks, but it cannot at present be defin- Another possibility is that the weather- ing took place on mountains so high as to have a sub-arctic type of climate. After the deposition of 500 feet or more of Eocene stone in the area now occupied pear to have undergone als that were brought sand- by Reef Ridge, conditions ap- a gradual change. The detrital materi- into the sea were of the same kinds as before, but they were small in amount. At the west end of Reef Ridge they make up a few hundred feet of clastic shale with intercalated sandy strata; the Devils Den region. amount the same thing may be true in In the intervening area, however, the of clastic material reaching the sea was insignificant compared to the enormous quantities that collected on the bottom. of diatoms and foraminifera While the present investigation has revealed nothing new in regard to the puzzling question of 26 the conditions of deposition vealed nothing at variance of this material, it has also re- with Dr. Branner*s interesting sug- gestion that the diatoms may have been carried into a partly land-locked, probably shallow sea by currents and killed by the unfavorable from the north, conditions there. J. C. Branner, Bull. Geol. Soc. Am., Vol. XXIV, 1913, pp. 94-95 At the conclusion of the deposition of diatomaceous the sea bottom was exposed the shaly strata inga anticline. gressed to erosion were folded along the axis of the present sandstone has two beds, series feet thick, of pure diatomite, interbedded The most obvious conclusion sandstone. to cause the and that of clastic shale and to begin was not so great the great differences with the from this strik- ing fact is that the change in conditions necessary deposition of diatomite to cease with In the region of the Coalinga anticline, hox^ever, the succeeding sandstone Coal- After a longer or shorter time the sea trans- more or less gravel intermixed. coarse in the Reef Ridge area, and again and laid down at first gravel, later sand each several material, as might be inferred from The sug- in the two types of sediment. gestion is strong that diatomite is a shallow-sea deposit in this region. During the deposition invertebrates swarmed of the Temblor sandstones, over parts of the sea bottom. of bones of land animals were occasionally brought North of Coalinga, the bones of the Merychippus marine Fragments in by streams. zone accumulated 27 during a late part of the epoch. A little later began the de- J. 0. Merriam, Tertiary Vertebrate Faunas of the North Coalinga Region of California, Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. XXII, Part 111, 1915. detritus derived presumably position of serpentine from the Fran several miles &est and north of the Coal ciscan area now exposed inga oilfield* In regard to the climate of the region during Temblor time, Professor Smith f s studies were still of subtropical evidence in this region." of evidence time. greater than The Mery- that during the later time "the land mammals furnished more grass shreds that it was somewhat to :.terriam to show fauna seemed invertebrates In regard to rainfall, such by the region at the present portion of Temblor undant that the marine types. as there is suggests that possessed chippus show found here were ab- If so, it is likely that the region than it does at present. point to the same conclusion, finite proof for it can at present A few other but no de- be given. During the latter portion of Temblor time, the serpentine detritus of the Big Blue was swept into the sea, or accumulated Coalinga. on a low coastal plain in the region just north of At the close of the epoch, the recently deposited sediments appear to have emerged for at least a short time, but are not known to have undergone any considerable The next definite episode is the amount of erosion. in the history of the region sweeping of sand and coarse gravel into the sea, while 28 oysters, pectens, These organisms barnacles, persisted etc., were living on the bottom. during the deposition of much of the formation in the region north of Coalinga, but died out farther south after the deposition of the basal gravels. A little later there began in the southern region the deposition of another series of diatomaceous this material is present there is a much greater beds. Only about 50 feet of at the west end of Reef Ridge, but thickness farther west ana many times as much toward the south. During the time of the diatom ac- cumulation, at least a few mollusks were living in this the sea, as well as a few vertebrates, probably whales; were also foraminifera in such abundance numerous lenses as there to give rise to At a later time deposition of limestone. clastic materials part of was resumed over the whole region. still there was a break in deposition, of Later and probably a with- drawal of the sea from at least a portion of the area. Nomland, Etchegoin Pliocene, page 201. of the Santa Margarita formation The clastic materials were furnished, without reasonable doubt, by an area of Fran- ciscan and other rocks which lay to the west of the sea in which they accumulated. The climate was probably not very different from that which prevailed over the region during Temblor time. The giant faunas such conditions as favorable suggest temperature, a concurrence of all salinity and abund- 29 ant food supply, found at present, The interbedding Indies. ic sediments and the in the East of pure diatomaceous as did the Temblor, shows again, conditions necessary for example, to cause cessation shale and clastthat the change of deposition of of the one beginning of deposition of the other was not so radical As before, however, as it would seem. can merely appeal for an explanation indefinite way to changes in a rather one of cur- rents. as Santa Margarita After the deposition of the beds classed was at least there a local break and an of the sea- After a longer or shorter period marine conditions bottom. were again established over the region and persisted series of lenticular sandstone, great emergence conglomerate, until the and sandy shale beds referred by Nomland to the Itchegoin group, had been deposited. During th« long period required for the deposition goin strata changes lands. to a thickness occurred the presence of a mile and a half, a great many in the San Joaquin The determination of these of the period. be shown, the period witnessed change and on the adjacent changes is complicated mitfc a final In a general a contest way, however, and as will now between subsidence victory for the latter; and from a climate of subtropical by of local varia- have recognized, as all previous investigators deposition, sea, in the strata of many evidences tions at all stages of Etche- a gradual warmth and moderate hum- idity to one that was relatively cool and arid. In regard to the source of t..chegoin there is less doubt than in any preceding detrital materials, period. and In many 30 strata occur pebbles varieties of fractured and veined chert and the other of rock that are found abundantly in the beds of mod- ern streams which drain areas of Franciscan Along with rocks. the chert there are chips of diatomite and other materials show the presence of earlier Tertiary rocks on the land areas. Hard blocks and pebbles of dark brown sandstone of the Cretace- These and the other available facts indic- ous are also found. ate that the that materials came from exactly such a land area as that which now exists immediately west of the Coalinga district in the Diablo Range. the mollusks In regard to the temperature, found in all but the highest Etchegoin strata are warm-temperate tropical species. The freshwater found in the upper strata, and brackish on the other hand, appear a gradual change, probably complieatedby tions not now discernable. areas is of the lano quantities These facts many minor varia The evidence in regard to humidity not definite. The presence consistent of great with aridity rather humidity, which would promote decomposition . to be re- of silicified wood in some of the upper Etchegoin strata, however, seems Cf fossils water lated to types now living in Northern California. suggest or sub- than high and not preservation H. G. Lyons, On the stratigraphy and Physiography of the Libyan desert of Igypt, Quart. Jour. Geol. 3oc. vol. pp. 545-547. of the wood. The remains of vertebrates suggest, on the other hand, that there was probably more grass in the region at that 31 The presence time than at present. per part of the series appears in a semi-arid region; of much gypsum, in the up- to suggest marginal salt lakes do the peculiar nodular, so, perhaps, Of. Nomland, op. cit., page 209. and in one case sun-cracked limestone beds. The great faunal changes noticeable of the upper Stchegoin demonstrate changes from horizon to horizon that important physiographic the kinds of change. were taking place, but merely suggest The views of Arnold and Anderson on this point are suggestive. of enormous ¦The presence by no other fossils, accompanied Stchegoin sands throughout the in some of the middle or upper indicates that at various periods (epoch) extensive prevailed along the edge of the San Joaquin the evidence (Dendraster), quantities of Bchinarachnius shallow sand flats sea." from the upper part of the series, Summarizing they show that it indicates "that a close connection existed between areas of salt water and nearly If not entirely fresh water during much of the (upper) Stchegoin period, and that, especially in the later portion of the period, conditions were on the verge of becoming such as existed during early Tulare time. The great thickness of inky-blue fine clay in the upper portion of the Itchegoin of the Kettleman Hills below the sands of the upper as fine delta deposits, Mya zone is believed to have originated possibly subaerially and above the reach of the tide." The absence and the presence from the "inky-blue fine clay" of mud cracks, in the corresponding strata exposed in the 32 Kreyenhagen Hills of several fairly thick and unusually uniform beds of fine, gray sandstone, gested origin of the series. tend to cast doubt upon the sug- The clay is very similar, on the other hand, to the upper Etchegoin clay associated beds in Priest Valley. not, however, Whether it accumulated or even whether subaerially it is, properly speaking, taic origin or not, the general conditions quotations with lignite suggested of dea- in the from Arnold and Anderson are probably correct. ilar views, in fact, have been suggested or Sim- by other workers in the region, and may be taken as established. In regard to the depth of the sea in this region, the evidence is clear. The Kettleman Hills strata were certainly depos- ited several miles from shore, the Kreyenhagen since the corresponding Hills, though deposited were apparently not actually littoral. strata sand, nevertheless strata some miles nearer of shore, The Kettleman Hills contain so many beds of gravel and coarse and so much material of freshwater or even subaerial origin, as to make it clear that the sea must have been shallow even at a considerable summarized distance from the diore. The faunal evidence, by Homland, is equally conclusive: fauna of the Etchegoin is composed shallow water. At some horizons, "The invertebrate entirely of forms living in locally, forms characteristic of brackish or even fresh water are present. istic of considerable Species depth have not been found." Nomland, op. cit., page 216. as character- 33 Three or four times during the epoch, volcanic ash fell over the region in such quantities as to make beds as much as 10 to 20 feet thick. Two of these beds, middle of the formation along Jacalitos occurring about the Greek, have already been Another is mentioned by Nomland in the following words: noticed. Nomland, op. cit., page 209. "Closing the period of deposition immediately before the transition of these vailing terrestrial deposits beds into the pre- of the Tulare, volcanoes were again This is shown by the large proportion active in this region. of tuffaceous or of the marine Etchegoin, material mixed with the clays of the Mya japonica zone of the North Coalinga region ........... It appears rather that they (i.e., ash beds) have not been found in the remarkable Kettleman Hills and in the Kreyenhagen the south." As a matter canic ash in places zone over a distance Hills, a few miles to of fact, a bed of fresh white vol- 10 feet thick occurs near the Mya japonica of at least 20 miles in the Kettleman Hills. Pits have been opened in at at several places, and some of the material has been quarried for use as Fullers earth. occurs generally in a steep The bed bluff made by a thick sandstone, the Bed at the base of the Tulare, and is in many places Freshwater covered by talus. The post-Etchegoin purposes pears be summarized very briefly. to be, in general, deposits history of the region may, for present The Tulare formation ap- an interbedding of lacustrine and swamp with fluviatile materials brought down by streams from 34 the mountains surrounding the portions of the formation now southern San Joaquin valley. exposed are near Freshwater the McKittrick district; also beds from records doubt- of clay and lignite, A good wimilar deal of the material deposit- was no doubt drifted about the dust and fine sand, The Tulare formation is, by the wind before its final burial. in short, very similar to the materials ing in the southern in of deep wells to be much more common farther out in the valley. ed, especially limestone, origin, is found at a good many places less of lacustrine beds appear the mountains fluviatile material, and naturally contain a good deal of coarse ancient alluvial fans, in fact. The that are now accumulat- San Joaquin valley. in After about 3000 feet of such material had accumulated the region of the Kettleman Hills, there was a great period of perhaps folding, the greatest times. since Jurassic The push came, probably, from the San Andreas rift, which is not many of the Coalinga district. miles southwest fault planes the series of Movements along old and axes of folding threw the Tertiary strata folds and broke them into the fault-blocks As a result presumably on the map (Plate I). ment of the great folds and monoclines, formation accumulated the Kreyenhagen overlying porous into shown of the develop- the oily material of in the portions of the from which much of it has recently been pumped. An uplifted erosion surface dissected by narrow, steep- Hills, and sited valleys in the northern part of the Kettleman many upraised terraces in some other parts of the district tell 35 something of the events of the long Tulare folding occurred. erted a distinct geographic period Of other events and the unraveling that must have ex- influence in the region, such as the glacial period, no trace has been detected. traces, since the post- The finding of such of the history underlying them, waits, like many similar problems, in most other parts of California, upon detailed physiographic investigation. A 36 THE PROBLEMS OF THE HEAVY MINERALS. The rest of this paper deals with a number of problems suggested by a more of less detailed study of the heavy min- erals obtained from a few hundred samples tiary rocks, of the Coalinga Ter- taken from many horizons and many localities. order to make the relation of the various problems In to one another and to the principles of general geology as clear as possible, the problems will be discussed in the order suggested by a typical The "broad principles governing the trend of cycle of erosion. events during any given cycle of erosion involve, among others, three fundamental land-mass, fact0r5. ....... the transportation chanical agency, conditions." the weathering of the weathered and the accumulation suitable basin of deposition, aqueous , .viz. material by me- of that material in a under varying subaerial A complete discussion Milner, Introduction to Sedimentary p. 85. of a or sub- of the relation of Petrography, London, 1923, the heavy minerals to these broad principles has yet to be written* of the subject Various aspects by Milner, Boswell, Cayeux, Milner, Boswell, pages 1915, Introduction to are discussed, Goldman and others. Sedimentary Petrography, however, In this paper pages 85ff. ueol. Mag., 1916 pp 105, 163. Cayeux, Introduction, Sci., 45-48. Goldman, Catahoula sandstone, Amer. Jour. p. 261. general principles are rocks of the Coalinga discussed district. only in relation to the Tertiary 37 Like the other constituents heavy minerals may be examined on such features weathering), rocks, the for the light they may throw of the distributive province (region of as its chief types of rock, its location, the climate under agency of sedimentary or agencies which the weathering of transportation, took place; on the and the length of time they worked; and on the kind of basin of deposition, conditions that prevailed in it. chiefly in mind during the course and and the The problem that has been of the investigation upon ?^hich this pa- er is based has to do with the possibility of correlating definite horizons over limited areas of the distribution of the heavy minerals Their distribution would be expected tions, especially changes province, of by a study in the formations. to depend both on condi- conditions, in the distributive and in the basin of deposition. In regard to the kind of rocks that outcropped in the dis- tributive province that furnished detrital materials Coalinga Tertiary formations, the heavy minerals give some debeds as well as the finite information, and the conglomerate quartz and feldspar grains give some more. information furnished by the conglomerates available, and has already been used. Tertiary formations to the In general, the is the more readily It suggests that all the derived materials from the Cretaceous Arnold and Anderson, op. cit, p. 145, 185, etc. formations; that the Santa Margarita and later formations contain 38 in addition more or less material derived from Franciscan rocks; and that the Btchegoin-Tulare detritus was partly furnished by earlier Tertiary formations. Detailed studies, comparison of thin sections various conglomerates of all classes ?d.th sections involving the of pebbles of the various known in the different mountain areas in the types of rocks in California, would doubt- less furnish a good deal of additional information. If compari- sons were to be made, further, minerals in the pebbles of the rare and in the various primary occurrences, formation might possibly gain considerably a possibility, however, of the pebbles merely emphasizes leave something heavy detrital minerals been rather scant. and that the to see to what The information gained from a grains in these Most of the quartz formations has grains have fluid in- have not been clusions, and th® exceptions such the fact that studies should be investigated study of the quartz and feldspar the in- in def initeness; to be desired, extent they may supply the lack. finite source. accessory traced to any de- Detailed study of the inclusions, especially of those of the "regular" type of Mackie might very possibly furnish valuable information. These "regular" inclusions, how- ever, are nothing more nor less than heavy minerals themselves. "when they (the common minerals, like Jayeux states the matter: quartz) definitely suggest their ori-in, it is generally by mineral inclusions of the same nature as the heavy minerals If, then, a really thorough study of the pebbles in question." L. Cayeux, op. cit., page 47. 39 and the common detrital minerals with reference requires a study of the heavy minerals argument should be necessary to their origin they contain, no further to prove that the heavy minerals that exist as free detrital grains in the sediments study under should also be considered. case, In the present though in no sense the study of the heavy minerals, complete in various definite respects at the present time, has supplemented the information already secured In the first place, it has from studies of the pebbles. In discussing than had been supposed. siderably sooner origin of the "Big Blue" Arnold and Anderson State: Arnold and Anderson, it is the earliest zone giving indubitable evidence in it of fragments of the rocks associated Franciscan formation." The occurrence not to mention other minerals, to give equally Temblor appears ample, casual tion* *4„v» that of the heavy minerals work in^ this of Arnold and Anderson possible. though of no great practical examination glaucophane, erosion during the whole in geological in a vivid manner the advantages with the indubitable evidence, however, Only the complete neglect that has hitherto prevailed the statement of abundant of the in nearly every sample of the rocks were undergoing of Temblor time. " the op. cit., page 175. occurrence made shown rocks contributed detritus to the basin con- that Franciscan the Franciscan al- importance to be gained -- country This ex- in itself, illustrates by at least a e^-p +k« neavy *« a « sedimentary j forraaffli"^o 1 0 in of the Vs*t»»w minerals 40 These minerals have still other advantages, however, which would be more evident in the study of a group of rocks in which beds were less plentiful. conglomerate Even here the thick Kreyenhagen and Santa Margarita diatomites of pebbles, but are sparingly supplied These have not been exhaustively examination of a few samples not exposed are entirely devoid with heavy minerals. studied, but so far as an shows, the Franciscan in the neighboring part of the Coast Ranges dur- ing the deposition the deposition but were exposed of the Kreyenhagen, of the Santa Margarita shale. does not detract of the example from its interest or conclusiveness as an of the value of the heavy minerals. The circumstances attending particularly the emphasis practical aspects magnesian during And in this case, too, the lack of Immeidate practical importance evidence were rocks the present investigation, that had to be given to certain of it, and the relative abundance heavy mine als that the samples fortunately led to a partial neglect It is theoretically of ferro- contained have un- of the rarer heavy minerals. likely that if these non-safic minerals, occurrence, which have in general a relatively restricted primary were studied exhaustively, they might furnish still more definite evidence in regard to the geology of tne lands adjacent to the Tertiary sea. to the location of the distributive province, the it is usually impossible to draw definite conclusions until portions of the various possible provinces that remain accessible ith reference In regard to the have been investigated petrographically. distributive provinces that may have existed during the California 41 Tertiary, such studies are still far from complete. the heavy minerals about of the various by some interesting plemented mentary. 1% is therefore recent Information types of rocks, work, is especially not to be expected tho sup- frag- that very definite conclusions can be drawn from the available data in regard to the sedimentary rocks. to the east or to the west of the sea in which it was must be left undecided formations, there detritus came from lands Whether the Eocene In regard for the present. seems little reason came at least in part from land areas to doubt deposited to the later that their detritus only a few miles west of the present Goalinga district, in the region of the present Whether other more distant areas Ranges. Coast also contributed mat- erials to the basis and where such areas may have been, cannot be determined at present. In regard to the location and geology of the distributive province that furnished materials have furnished then, the heavy minerals evidence. When more exhaustive to their to the Tertiary formations, distinctly valuable data are available tn regard distribution both as primary and detrital minerals, the definiteness of the evidence is likely to be much increased. their evidence It remains to consider conditions that prevailed in regard to the climatic in the distributive province at vari- ous times. The relation of rock to the climate the mineral composition of a sedimentary that prevailed at the time of its deposi- tion has been discussed in many papers. The relation that is 42 See, for example, Mackie, "Felspars in Sedimentary Rocks as Indicators of Climate", Trans. Ed in. Geol. Soc. VII, 1896, p. 443. Barton, D.C., *The Geologic Significance of Arkose Deposits," Jour. Geol. Vol. 24, 1916, pp. 417-450. supposed to exist between the mineralogy of a sediment climate under which its detrital materials therefore, cerned, So far as the heavy minerals are con- well known. sedimentary types is, were seathered it is obvious that only the less stable, magnesian and the chiefly ferro- If a are worthy of special consideration. rock contains a large proportion of such minerals, as do the post-Eocene formations here under discussion, one hypothesis to account for the fact would be that the detrital materials were weathered under an arid or a cold climate; and the materials for such a formation as the Avenal sandstone, which amphiboles and pyroxenes in are almost completely absent, might have been weathered under warm, humid climatic conditions. That other possible be entertained hypotheses to account for these facts may will be evident from a reading of the first part of this paper, where the facts are explained in a different manner, more in harmony with the other kinds of evidence ished by the rocks. expressed will now be discussed In the first place, from rocks of Eocene abundant, that led to the views The reasons furnthere in more detail** the absence of ferromagnesian age is counterbalanced largely fresh feldspar. minerals by the presence of The feldspar of the later than that formations is little, if any, fresher or more abundant This fact suggests that some factor in the Avenal sandstone. 43 other than climate is probably the cause in content of f erromagnesian the formations sideration of the problem, it seemed if possible, of the difference by a study of corresponding the matter, to test formations in some region where both the Eocean and later sediments were supposed been derived from the same parent rocks. account Upon con- minerals. desirable of to have A reading of Pack's of the Tertiary formations in the south end of the San that this area might be suitable for Joaquin valley suggested It is likely, according to Pack, the test. that the Tehachapi Pack, R.W., The Midway-Sunset Oil Field, Calif., U.S. Geol. Survey Prof. Paper 116, especially pages 23 and 29. Mountains, and perhaps ing either Eocene be expected the San Eraigdios, or Lower Miocene time. that the ferromagnesian formed in the two epochs matic differences. were not submerged In that case, mineral content the Eocene it might of the rocks should vary, if at all, because If, for example, dur- of cli- of that region should be free from heavy minerals, while the Lower Miocene rocks should have entered them abundantly, into the matter the chance would appear greater A sample of Socene town of Maricopa. tirely. but if from the Tejon Ranch was, therefore, mapped by Pack as upper Vaqueros grains, than before; would probably be less. pared as to heavy mineral content spathic, climates or differed in some other the two did not differ in this respect, way, the chance that ancient with a specimen com- from the beds in the foothills south of the This study showed but the Tejon is abundantly that both are highly feld- supplied with amphibole while the Lower Miocene sample lacks them almost en- In other words, the conditions in this area, if these 44 samples are typical of the formations from which they come, are the exact reverse of those in the Coalinga district, which was part of the same basin of deposition, hundred miles away. portant The chance than a that climate had anything im- to do with the matter under discussion considerably is therefore weakened. So far as it goes, ferences and not much more of the various then, the evidence suggests the dif that formations in heavy mineral and feld- spar content should probably be attributed chiefly to changes of source. That the matter is even less simple than it seems, however, may be seen from the consideration time streams that at the present are bringing down and spreading over portions of the San Joaquin valley immense quantities under the alpine conditions us disintegrated If the land areas up in the Sierra Nevada. that prevail high of what is now and Miocene California varied as much in climate during Eocene time as the various parts of the state ceivable degree do now, almost .any con- of variation in the composition and Miocene sediments detrit- of feldspathic of the Eocene would be readily accounted for. whole problem of the relation of mineral composition The to ancient climates is in fact so beset with difficulties as, in many in- stances, to defy solution. So far as the present investiga- tion shows, furthermore, offer any advantages In regard the heavy minerals do not appear to as climatic criteria over the feldspars. to the transporting agents trital materials, definite conclusions ficult to draw. The degree that have carried de- are likewise usually dif- of rounding of grains of quartz, 45 zircon, tourmaline, of wear etc., is certainly a measure to which they have been subjected their history as detrital grains. bles. To consider at of the amount during sometime So is the roundness of peb- but a single one of the complicating factors, C.T.l.entworth, The shapes of pebbles, U.S. Geol. Survey Bull. 730, 1922, p.p. 91-114. •V.H.Sherzer, Criteria for the recognition of the various types of sand grains, Bull. Geol. Soc. America, Vol. 21, 1910, pp. 625-662. C.L.Dake, The problem of the St. Peter sandstone, Bull. School of Mines and Metallurgy, Univ. Missouri, Vol. 6, 1921, pp. 177-185. formations, however, it is certain that sedimentary the Coast Range Cretaceous in thickness, have so frequently throughout strata which aggregate furnished materials such as several miles for younger sediments geologic history that such data as the degree of rounding of grains must be used very cautiously. It is not obvious, furthermore, supplement that the heavy minerals will the evidence of the pebbles and quartz grains in any important respect, unless possibly in studies of metamorphic sediments. The value of certain criteria for the determination of foliated crystalline rocks, Jour. Geol. vol. 20, IV-US, pp. 244-258. J.D.Trueman, By a slightly different approach have been made ing agents to infer something that affected mica and of the amphiboles good cleavage by these to the problem attempts in regard to the transport- detritus by noting the proportions and pyroxenes. minerals is supposed The possession to cause of of them to be 46 Goochild, Desert Conditions in Britain, Trans. Edin. Geol. Soc. VII, 1896, p. 206. Goldman, op. cit., page 278. eliminated from sands that are subject to eolian action. addition to the fact that some British dune sands have been found to contain mica, there are theoretical reasons ing if the proposed In for doubt- criteria have very general validity. In the first place, dominant eolian action is likely to be associated with an arid or semi-arid climate large proportion of the ferromagnesian line rocks to persist disintegrated - the kind that causes minerals in the crystal- in the disintegrated material. material were left to long-continued the wind, there is no doubt that the cleavable minerals would eventually ferromagnesian action of ferromagnesian If, on the other hand, the action of the wind were occasionally to be seems perfectly possible If this be worn so fine as to be easily car- ried away from the sandy regions. violent rains, as seems interrupted by short but true of all actual deserts, that a considerable it proportion of the minerals in the weathering products might escape destruction by wind action and be carried by streams basin of deposition. to the Unless aridity were so extreme, there- fore, as to eliminate water entirely from the role of ing agent, it is doubtful if the resulting sediments ly lack ferromagnesian as suggested a transport- would entire minerals from this cause alone. In fact, above, it has been argued with at least an equal show of probability that a considerable proportion of ferromag- 47 nesian minerals the in a sediment often implies partial aridity in distributive province and therefore, presumably, a consider- able degree of eolian action. In conclusion, it must be admitted do not serve at present to give us any tion in regard to the agents a sedimentary rock. that the heavy minerals very definite informa- that transported the detritus of So far as the rocks under this paper are concerned, the heavy minerals ever to our knowledge of the transporting discussion in add nothing what- agents. Everything that is known about these rocks, including the nature and slight rounding of many of the pebbles and boulders, gree of angularity of the quartz grains, erial was carried by short streams Diablo Range or other nearby areas. minerals, though consistent and the high de- suggests that the mat- from the region of the present The character of the heavy with this view, confirms it only indirectly. Conditions in the Basin of Deposition: In an interesting study of the St. Peter sandstone, writes against the view that the heavy mineral content Dake gives any useful information about the conditions of deposition formation. igraphic Instead, he states relationships the character that "the structural and strat- in the field, including such features of bedding, cross-bedding, gradation and similar associated valid criteria for determining posit was last laid down." structural relationships of a unconformities, phenomena constitute the conditions under lateral the only which a de- If among the stratigraphic the author means, as and as is likely, to 48 include the fossils, ment of the case. there is little to criticize in his state- In spite of this fact, however, Cayeux has shown in convincing fashion that the distribution, if not the actual presence, may £ield of heavy minerals much important existed in the basin of his discussion in the beds of a formation information about the conditions that deposition. A translation of part of will make the matter clear. Introduction, page 47. "In addition (to certain other uses), heavy minerals several of these are means incomparably more sensitive and cer- tain than organisms for determining the currents, and their introduction into a given region is ofter the werk of currents. has been invoked to But many animals whose presence intervention of currents are endowed locomotion. Besides, with their own means of eggs and embryos fixed accidentally otherwise upon swimming animals, of the latter and be carried point of origin, the currents or can profit by the movements to great distances from their remaining absolutely without influence on their dissemination..... hand) one may say without exaggeration heavy minerals prove the is an inexhaustible (On the other that the study of the mine of information in regard " to the history of the currents of the ancient seas... Referring to the conditions in the Upper Cretaceous of the Paris Basin, which he has studied for many years, he continues: 49 "It is known that a surface the came into this basin through current strait of Pel ton and that another The first carried certain materials slightest trace in the deposits came down from the north. of which one finds not the To make our of the second. ideas definite, we may recall that all chalk which contains kyanite has been deposited the southwest. un^ler the influence of the current So true is this that the area current may be defined by the points where in the chalk. It suffices therefore from affected by this this mineral is found to hunt for kyanite in the chalk of a given horizon in order to get the data for a current There is no doubt that we have here the map for that horizon. principle of a method of defining the currents of influence in the ancient to render the greatest The researches believe, a method called, I seas: British geologists by Cayeux applies the principle suggested rocks of all ages in Great Britain. fact, several geologists mineral content the " to pal eo oceanography. services of various and their zone have shown that broadly to sedimentary During recent years, in have made more or less use of the heavy of a formation in making correlations. while results have not always been above suspicion, and have oc casionally fceen negative, ly encouraging, and parts they have, on the whole, been distinct- and have rendered may have considerable it very likely that the method value as a means of formations, - at least, of recognizing over limited areas. formations If it will work at all, the method has certain marked advantages from In the first place, the point of view of the oil geologist. every sample from an oil well can positively be counted upon to furnish a supply of perfectly preserved heavy minerals; 50 only a small percentage of the samples, on the other hand, have recognizable fossils, even of micro-organisms. place, suites while of heavy minerals in the second are likely to be repeated, and are certain not to be of so great lateral distribution as many faunas, are likely to be characteristic they finite horizons over short distances; hand, are very likely to range In the next place, strata. most fossils, through a greater the repetition samples one now matches on the other thickness of of heavy mineral suites at intervals is not so great an obstacle of well of very de- in the study as it might be in some other cases. Just as and shale by their succession beds of sandstone in different wells, so he would be able to match the varied heavy mineral assemblages found in his samples. of accuracy ing degree often attainable And since a surpris- in regard to underground structure is now. by the study of the inaccurate data furnished by drillers* logs, it would seem very likely that a proportionately greater degree of accuracy might be obtained from a con- sideration of more accurate including the All things considered, heavy mineral assemblages. to be no inherent reason lithological data, why a study of the heavy there minerals seemed in the California Tertiary formations might not yield results of considerable practical importance. The discussion of the distribution of heavy minerals in a formation willbe preceded presented in part, in regard by a summary of the data, already to the general minerals in the Tertiary series. with- distribution of the It has been found, for ex- 51 ample, that any sample of the Eocene taken anywhere inga district can be readily distinguished sample of any later formation. samples from almost any The only later bed that furn- ished ft heavy mineral assemblage all the Eocene in the Coal- resembling those furnished by studied came from the basal conglomerate of the Temblor formation near the axis of the Coalinga anticline. It may be supposed that on the low Lands adjacent which the non-i-elastic Kreyenhagen to the sea shale accumulated, in the soil at became so thoroughly decomposed following period it furnished est be expected; beginning of the beds only the stabl- to the basal is correct, If this supposition types of heavy minerals. it suggests that/ the that not many recurrences of the phenomenon and certainly no others have been found. In regard to the distribution of the heavy minerals later formations, a few facts may be given. the few taken north of that creek contain it. goin, on the other hand, contains an abundance all localities, Some minerals, ant in all the post-Eocene such as augite, is probably altered beyond recognition. sufficiently detailed minerals at first The necessity The upper Stcheof hypersthene in are locally abundnot re- In some samples, So far as bution of the very rare minerals are concerned, to be made. while most of formations, but apparently stricted to any particular horizons. in the The Temblor samples taken south of Waltham Creek all lack hypersthene, not been are to augite the distri- studies have to permit any generalizations of eliminating the ferromagnesian was not so as to study the rarer minerals adequately The later studies suggest, as one would realized. 52 expect, that the rarer minerals are more variable in their distribution from bed to bed. furthermore, than the others It is entirely possible, that some of these minerals may prove to be limited to certain formations. To obtain the desired ion of the heavy minerals the outset evidence in regard to the distributwithin a formation it was apparent at that the solution of a fairly difficult preliminary the problem of taking samples problem was required: namely, that would be more or less comparable to those one might get from a drilling well, and the exact stratigraphic From some points which would be known in advance. actual well samples available. considered relations of would have been advantageous, of view but none were could be From other points of view outcrop samples and they, at least, could be secured. preferable The ideal way of taking them would probably be to dig a trench ac- ross the outcrops perpendicular to make of each of samples bed that could be recognized places, the samples with reference with others the sons this method has not been followed in the it was considered and by taken similarly at other one might hope to learn accurately Instead to a definite with certainty elsewhere, the heavy minerals in a part of a formation. gation. and three-foot or five-foot section a single sample. By taking the series comparing to the strike of the beds, distribution of For various reapresent investi- of intensive collecting of the kind suggested, preferable to take samples in several verti- cal and lateral series from different portions of the Miocene and: Fliocene strata. This method offered the advantage of 53 giving a better general notion of the distribution of the heavy minerals in the whole group of rocks, and was much more readily carried out. It is sufficiently evident that only very intensive and long-continued studies of a group of formations would enable one to decide definitely with what degree of accuracy might be correlated by means cal characteristics. of heavy minerals they or other physi- It is evident also that the degree would differ in different parts of the same formation, and that complete success with one formation would not guarantee cess with other formations. equal suc- The best that could be hoped from a limited amount of study was to show whether or not the heavy mineral assemblages vary from bed to bed in the Miocene and Pliocene formations, and whether is likely to be constant If these seemed questions the assemblage for distances could be answered every reason to hope in any one bed of a mile or a few miles. in the affirmative there that with continuous series of samp- les such as might be collected during the drilling of a deep well, one could certainly recognize To take a vertical series Good sets were obtained some of the beds, at least. of samples is a very easy matter. from the Temblor and Jacalitos forma- tions, and also from the Fernando formation north of Ventura, along the Ventura River. showed conclusively The study of these samples that the various beds in such formations as these differ surprisingly in their assemblages erals. (see Tables) of heavy min- Bven a bed only a few feet thick may have an assemblage of heavy minerals entirely different from a similar bed lying 54 upon it or under it. Shale beds have the same assemblages as beds, and differ from one another as distinctly. sandstone In the earlier studies it was noticed that the chief dif- in mineral composition ferences in the abundance of hornblende, nesian minerals. of the samples glaucophane The very stable minerals, tourmaline, brookite, etc., seemed were differences and other ferromag- sue% as zircon, to be generally present to the extent of 10 to 30 percent, but not to vary noticeably in different samples. Theoretical considerations suggested that these minerals, many of fhieh are of relatively restricted ought to vary more, rather than less, occurrence, ated ferromagnesian satisfactory minerals. than the associ- A little experimenting method for separating the two classes gave a of minerals, and thus allowing attention to be directed to the content rocks in the rarer, more stable minerals. investigation The result of this than had previously been realized; that the proportions determined adequately of the was to show, first, that the number of rare miner- als was decidedly greater second, primary of the rarer minerals had not been in the earlier work; and third, that the rarer minerals differ from bed to bed rather more than the less These results are considered to show that in all rare minerals. attempts to make correlations ferromagnesian others, by studying the heavy minerals, minerals should be studied separately if they are present in any considerable from the quantities. For methods of making these and other separations used in this investigation, reference may be made to a paper entitled "Some Heavy Eineral Investigations", to be published in forth-coming number of Economic Geology. methods^for the 55 In addition to the reasons some others may be added. that the minerals already given for this advice, In the first place, of relatively restricted are the more likely to be restricted content of ferromagnesian minerals facts brought out by the present which no entirely adequate facts in regard possible strata of a definite in a formation in is one of the most surprising investigation, and reason can be given. to the phenomenon one for Until more are available it mill not be feel sure that such variations can be trusted to be to In the second laterally. persistent primary occurrence to strata The great variation of successive age. theory suggests to find the ferromagnesian place, it is not unusual minerals much decomposed in one part of a bed, even though they are perfectly fresh in other parts This condition, due apparently of the same bed. it difficult to determine alteration, makes of the heavy mineral assemblages of likeness to secondary the actual degree in the vari- ous samples. To learn whether or not the heavy mineral assemblages a bed are likely to be laterally persistent, in it was necessary the to find a bed that could be traced for a few miles without slightest MJfT of doubt. Even in a country of excellent out- crops, like the Coalinga district, such a bed was very difficult to find. As a result of prolonged that met the requirements many casts bed, several beds more or less well were discovered. The best one will be described. ish sandstone search It is a yellowish or brown- two or three feet thick, which contains of middle Etchegoin mollusks. It outcrops along 56 along one side of a range of hills that runs east and west paral- lel to Jacalitos Creek about 15 miles southwest Immediately overlying this sandstone white ash about 20 feet thick. of Coalinga. is a conspicuous bed of Inasmuch as the strata all dip Mentioned by Nomland, op. cit., p. 208. toward the hill, both beds maintain a nearly straight 75 degrees course across ravines and spurs for the total distance can be traced, visible from the Parkfield grade across ables one to collect strictly comparable another there the Diablo Range samples a few stratum en- Its relation to the sandstone along the whole distance they The ash bed is distinctly or about two miles. miles to the south. that from the latter There is, to be sure, of its outcrop. ash bed several hundred feet higher in the section, but the two in this particular is no possibility of confusing area. The results of a study of some samples from this sand- A glance at them is suffici- stone bed are shown in Table A. ent to show taken that the lateral persistency of the assemblage minerals in this particular bed is decidedly encouraging. distance from the first sample The to the last, two miles, is suf- ficient to carry one entirely across most oil fields. this bed is much more peculiar of Unless in the distribution of its heavy minerals than there is any reason to suppose, there is no doubt furnthat the heavy mineral method will, if adequately applied, out subsurface valuable aid in the difficult task of working ish 57 in limited areas. structure Some other aspects of the matter, for which the available data do not furnish really satisfactory answers, will now be In the first place, it would be interesting mentioned. know to what extent the conclusions the late Tertiary marine strata water beds. reached to in this study of would apply to the Tulare fresh- It is, of course, evident that the circumstances attending the deposition of a stratum decide whether or not the heavy mineral distribution is such as to be useful in correlating the different portions of the stratum. There is un- fortunately, however, an almost complete lack of data on the character ments. of the distribution in different kinds of modern sediExamination of several samples of beach sand collected at different places along the California coast shows that they differ immensely in their heavy mineral content. probable, however, that If samples of sand could be secured enough from the shore so that they are being deposited the influence of a dominating current, in their enables heavy mineral composition. under In fact, so far as theory in vfcich one could hope to use heavy minerals for correlation are those the of which are swept by currents more or less uni- formly over the bottom of the basin of deposition. ocene conglomerates The Pli- of the Coalinga District, even those of marine origin, vary greatly in composition from place. far they would vary much less one to see, the only kinds of sediments constituents very It seems place to The sands vary less, and the silts and muds, presum- ably, least of all. Insofar as the Tulare beds are really 58 lake beds, then, it is probable that their heavy mineral assembl- ages are distributed much as those of the older, but very simil- ar, marine strata. have beds In fact, the Tulare beds may be found to of freshwater the equivalent limestone, such as those outcropping strata of the Buena Vista and Elk Hills, or other equally good markers that will render minerals unnecessary in some places. ready noticed, are composed fans, and other subaerial the study of the heavy The Tulare beds, as al- in part, however, of ancient alluvial deposits. If a well driller is so un- furtunate as to strike a few hundred feet of these beds, entirely improbable feature whatever his samples Summary in that either the heav^ minerals or any other will enable to those it is him to determine taken from neighboring the relation of wells. of Conclusions: The results of this inquiry into the usefulness of the heavy minerals in adding to our knowledge of Tertiary geological history in the Coalinga district will now be summarized: 1. On the land were exposed areas of Eocene and Oligocene time chiefly sedimentary of the central Coast Ranges. then exposed. the cessation The diastrophic of Kreyenhagen of Temblor deposition appear Franciscan rocks, which sand- strata of conglomerate, stone, and shale, such as those composing series there the Knoxville-Chico Franciscan movements rocks were not that occurred between shale deposition and the beginning to have brought to view masses contributed detritus to all later for- mations. 2. of While some of the finer sediment the Sierra Nevada or other distant areas, may have come from the evidence is 59 good that the later Tertiary detrital materials ly from that portion of the Coast Ranges present Coalinga district. came almost entire immediately west of the It is likely that most of the mat- erials for the earlier formations came from the same region. 3. gest The fresh feldspars and ferromagnesian that on some parts of the land areas focks took place under conditions somewhat minerals sug- weathering of the older different, either colder or drier, than a study of the faunas and flors has sug- gested. This fact may point to the existence local climatic variations, on the land of possibly due to the presence of high mountains. 4. that transported the to the basin of deposition, the Upon the problem of the agents detritus from the land areas heavy minerals throw no certain light. In regard to conditions in the basin of deposition, studies ha^ not proceeded sufficiently far to enable any gen5. eralizations suggest, to be made about however, the direction of currents. that the action of the currents, They combined with in the regions that furnished detrital materials were recognized at least such that some beds of the Tertiary may be of heavy minerover small areas, by their distinct assemblages changes als. 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Am t mm It t •I' f £ | * • i* i aft , »C©*C C»r* g§ • Sou li Si ** •• ** ** •* i • : &h ; 3 * * fl in • * * aa .o:«m : s*. • «m •• •* —— «? m* .* _ • ** •* ** w* *** M **** »* «* ••» ? m. a *•*»** * * *• ft '• fa ft ____•¦«» * ** *• * m tm * ?• - • . ¦ 1 b3 : s§ gv^ 10 P, . * ? c • E<d :So |g :s S : k§> • aj * HS * «s zt o ftiN RO » 1 • :|fH^ : *« *• — .o«a.e; *" ** ** *• ** ' * * * * : : h§ 61 MINBHALOGICAL ANALYSES, Abbreviations: hb px op ¦Jd-or+— —- hornblende pyroxene opaque present in small amount. absent. Figures at head of columns refer to sample number. Figures in columns are approximate percentages. A. Samples taken from a" sandstone bed about three feet thick which underlies a white ash bed in the Vacalit.o s"(£) formation, on and near the Jacalitos Ranch. Samples are arranged in order from east to r-est. Two miles from the first to the last. dumber, designate grains counted in slide. *• 3;28-E Hornblende Glaucophane Basaltic * hb. Augite Colorless px. Hypersthene Epidote Black op. Turbid Topaz Titojitte. Zircon Tour aa line Garnet 68 1 9 328-A, 327-a, 72 1 4 .m. 3 J. D — 2 17 74 3 4 81 5 1 3 £4 80 2 77 1 75 2 2 2 i < # 4 hi r AZr-'*\ } OmmO # 68 5 1 ? 326. 71 2 3 1 i181 # ? ? 12 14 9 17 4 5 9 5 3 # 1 1 i f # # 12 mm 2 2 | # # # 5 3 1 ft # I # I i ? without sufficient care, from a sandstone bed several feet thick underlying a white shale bed m the Jacalitos formation, between Jacalitos and Waltham Creeks. Total distance a little over 1/2 mile. 290, 231 289, 288, 287, 285, 283, 284, 35 14 26 11 34 17 25 17 Hornblende 31 Glaucophane ## JW ft 8 11 t 10 Basaltic hb. 11 J J± 34 8 2 5 2 3? Augite 3 Colorless px. 71 Z5 1 4 i l ft 4 Ipidote 12 ,8 19 89 50 31 33 50 49 Om«e 18 B. Samples taken, - Titanite Zircon Garnet — - 63*5 1 111 * 1 ¦ I - f 7 | * * * Til J 62 •ttIN.BHALQGIC.AL ANALYSES. C. Vertical section of Temblor in Tar Canyon. Hornblende Glaucopliane Red amphibole Augite Colorless px. Hypersthene Ipidote Black Opaque Turbid Titanite Zircon Rutile Tourmaline Garnet D. Eapato Zircon Turbid Black opaque Basaltic hb. Rutile Garnet Tourmaline Titanite Augite Hornblende Glacophane Bpidote 246 249 53 60 1 11 4 -252 44 37 4 8 8 3 2 255 258 261 264 270 22 38 56 42 75 14 1 14 ki-f w 14 4 2 56 7 56 9 8 4 14 5 1(?) 4 8 11 14 1- 4 2 1 14 5 104 5 4 4 9 1 10 4 ~3--f*|l3-f Creek Eocene 312-A 73 5 2 «— 38 2 1 49 276 57 8 2 1 4 S 8 8 14 — 273 134 5 14-4 4 2 4 + 2 1 3 4- l^- 7 14 JLJL 63 g MINSRALOGICAL ANALYSES. Samples 296 Lower 297 « Jacalitos". M taken along Jacalitos Jacalitos t; 299 c 301 white sa, midd/e Stchegoin'! Same (?) 303 296 Hornblende Basaltic hb, Augite Hypers then© Ipidote Black opaque Turbid Titanite Zircon Rutile Tourmaline Garnet ? c 7 297 1 298 299 300 60 31 26 301 302 303 37 8 8 24- 1121+ -~2-43+2 - 28 25 4 44 .*. 1 28 50 25-551 (2 (IS) 44) 2 (7 (5) 12 61 15 ) + 318 22 1 1 1 11 13 +42 4-4+ 17 48 + 4 3 5 4 _... ~ - — -¦- S 7 1 + 1 1 -- -- Creek. Alluvium Tutorc formation Much ftiass'ivc blots sondsrone, marine Erchecjoin group *°"* Drob sandstone ond sandy shole Santo Mora ah to formotion Diatomite imbedded in sandstone Tern bIor formation Sondstone Kreyenhagen Avenal ("Jaoali-ros") with calcareous "Reef Beds" shole sandstone moo. Whitish ond yellowish marine sandstone. feet of- Cretaceous shale, sandstone and cona/ome rote underlain by varied igneous and metamorphic Franciscan rocks (Jurassic) . Mony thousand Pre -Tertiary rooks. PI.Z. Columnar Section or Tertiary Formation* of the Coalinga Dsfrtcf. PLATE IV. Fig. 1. Thin section of brownish, fossil iferous sandstone found near the base of the Avenal sandstone, near Big Tar Canyon. Angular grains of quartz and feldspar, with one large shall fragment, set in Magnification 33 diameters. calcite cement. Fig. 2. An assemblage of heavy minerals typical of the Eocene rocks in the Goalinga district. Zircon crystals, one or tiso tourmaline grains, some opaque minerals, and a few grains of quartz or feldspar with very low relief. 42 diameters. Fig. 3. ¦*" %£} 4. Magnification Heavy minerals from a sandstone under a white ash bed in the middle Itchegoin (see text for discussion). Grains are chiefly amphiboles (common hornblende, glaucophane, and basaltic hornblende) with a few opaque ores. Fairly typical of all post -Kreyenhagen formations. 42 diameters. Thin section of an oolitic phase of a calcareous sandstone (lower Mya zone) in the upper Stchegoin of the Kettleman Hills. Small gastropods, some serving as nuclei of oolites, and oolites formed around grains of quartz, feldspar, chert, and rock fragments. This bed *?as deposited in fresh or nearly fresh water, and is the only oolitic phase of the Etchegoin yet discovered. 20 diameters. All mierophotographs Tickell. were made by Professor F. G. PLATE IV. A& % JI S <Sfi_ ' W :/* \ w • V# *S_* ¦ -_L'¦¦¦ft*, Fig. 1. Avenal sandstone. Thin section Fig. 3. Etchegoin minerals heavy v * #•' ar** JTV -p.-^?^ . ' Fig. 2. Eocene heavy minerals Fig. 4. Etchegoin oolite.