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Franciscan Complex

The Franciscan Complex or Franciscan Assemblage is a geologic term for a late Mesozoic terrane of heterogeneous rocks found throughout the California Coast Ranges, and particularly on the San Francisco Peninsula. It was named by geologist Andrew Lawson, who also named the San Andreas fault that defines the western extent of the assemblage.[1]

Franciscan Complex
Stratigraphic range: Late Jurassic to Late Cretaceous
Chevron folds in ribbon chert of the Marin Headlands, California. Geologist Christie Rowe for scale.
Typevaried; primarily metamorphic (low grade), but also sedimentary, igneous and high-pressure metamorphic
Underliesvarious
Overliesbasement; Coast Range Ophiolite in some areas
Lithology
Primaryschist (incl. serpentinite), sandstone, basalt, greywackes
Othershale, chert
Location
RegionCalifornia Coast Ranges, northern Transverse Ranges
CountryUnited States
Type section
Named forSan Francisco, California

The Franciscan Complex is dominated by greywacke sandstones, shales and conglomerates which have experienced low-grade metamorphism.  Other important lithologies include chert, basalt, limestone, serpentinite, and high-pressure, low-temperature metabasites (blueschists and eclogites) and meta-limestones. Fossils like radiolaria are found in chert beds of the Franciscan Complex. These fossils have been used to provide age constraints on the different terranes that constitute the Franciscan. The mining opportunities within the Franciscan are restricted to deposits of cinnabar and limestone.

The outcrops of the formation have a very large range, extending from Douglas County, Oregon to Santa Barbara County, California.[2] Franciscan-like formations may be as far south as Santa Catalina Island. The formation lends its name to the term describing high-pressure regional metamorphic facies, the Franciscan facies series.[3]

Geologic history edit

 
Map modified from Irwin (1990) [4] showing distribution of Great Valley Sequence and Franciscan Complex (in blue).
 
Diagram (modified from Fig 3.11 in Irwin, 1990) showing the depositional setting of the Franciscan Assemblage and the contemporaneous Great Valley Sequence,.[5]

The Franciscan Complex is an assemblage of metamorphosed and deformed rocks, associated with east-dipping subduction zone at the western coast of North America.[6] Although most of the Franciscan is Early/Late Jurassic through Cretaceous in age (150-66 Ma),[7] some Franciscan rocks are as old as early Jurassic (180-190 Ma) age and as young as Miocene (15 Ma).[8] The different age distribution represents the temporal and spatial variation of mechanisms that operated within the subduction zone.[9] Franciscan rocks are thought to have formed prior to the creation of the San Andreas Fault when an ancient deep-sea trench existed along the California continental margin. This trench, the remnants of which are still active in the Cascadia and Cocos subduction zone, resulted from subduction of oceanic crust of the Farallon tectonic plate beneath continental crust of the North American Plate. As oceanic crust descended beneath the continent, ocean floor basalt and sediments were subducted and then tectonically underplated to the upper plate.[10] This resulted in widespread deformation with the generation of thrust faults and folding, and caused high pressure-low temperature regional metamorphism.[10] In the Miocene, the Farallon-Pacific spreading center reached the Franciscan trench and the relative motion between Pacific-North America caused the initiation of the San Andreas Fault. Transform motion along the San Andreas Fault obscured and displaced the subduction related structures, resulting in overprinting of two generations of structures.[11]

Description edit

 
Shale matrix mélange with clasts of sandstone and greenstone on Marshall's Beach, San Francisco

The units of the Franciscan complex are aligned parallel to the active margin between the North American and Pacific plates.[12] The Franciscan Complex is in contact with the Great Valley Sequence, which was deposited on the Coast Range Ophiolite, along its eastern side.[13][14] The type area of Franciscan rocks in San Francisco consists of metagraywackes, gray claystone and shale, thin bedded ribbon chert with abundant radiolarians, altered submarine pillow basalts (greenstone) and blueschists.[15] Broadly, the Franciscan can be divided into two groups of rocks. Coherent terranes are internally consistent in metamorphic grade and include folded and faulted clastic sediments, cherts and basalts, ranging from sub-metamorphic to prehnite-pumpellyite or low-temperature blueschist (jadeite-bearing) grades of metamorphism. Mélange terranes are much smaller, found between or within the larger coherent terranes and sometimes contain large blocks of metabasic rocks of higher metamorphic grade (amphibolite, eclogite, and garnet-blueschist).[10] The mélange zones in the Franciscan usually have a block in matrix appearance with higher grade metamorphic blocks (blueschist, amphibolite, greenschist, eclogite) embedded within the mélange matrix.[16] The matrix material of the mélanges are mudstone or serpentinite. Geologists have argued for either a tectonic or olistostormal origin.[17] In the northern Coast Ranges, the Franciscan has been divided into the Eastern, Central and Coastal Belts based on metamorphic age and grade, with the rocks younging and the metamorphic grade decreasing to the west.[18][19][10] The Franciscan varies along strike, because individual accreted elements (packets of trench sediment, seamounts, etc.) did not extend the full length of the trench. Different depths of underplating, distribution of post-metamorphic faulting, and level of erosion produced the present-day surface distribution of high P/T metamorphism.[9][10]

Gallery edit

Fossils edit

Franciscan sediments contain a sparse, but diverse assemblage of fossils. The most abundant fossils by far are microfossils, particularly in the cherts, which contain single-celled organisms called radiolarians that have exoskeletons of silica. There are also in some of the shales microfossils of planktonic foraminifera that have exoskeletons of carbonate. These microfossils, by and large, indicate deposition in an open-water setting where deep-water conditions exist.[20] Vertebrate fossils in the Franciscan are extremely rare, but include three Mesozoic marine reptiles that are shown in the table below.[21] Again, these indicate an open-water, and therefore deep-marine setting. Although rare, a few shallow-marine fossils have been found as well, and include extinct oysters (Inoceramus) and clams (Buchia).[20] Microfossils in the Calera Limestone member of the Franciscan exposed at the Permanente and Pacifica cement quarries also indicate a shallow-marine setting, with deposition on top of a seamount in the tropical Pacific Ocean and subsequent transport and accretion by the Pacific Plate onto the California continental margin.[22] Thus, even though most of the Franciscan appears to have been deposited in a deep-water setting, it is a complex and diverse assemblage of rocks, and shallow-water settings, though not the norm, existed as well.

Mesozoic Vertebrate Fossils of the Franciscan Complex
Genus Species Notes
Ichthyosaurus californicus[23] Name means "fish-lizard of California." Found in 1935 in Stanislaus County in a piece of Franciscan chert from the Coast Ranges washed into the Great Valley.
franciscanus[23] Name means "fish-lizard of the Franciscan." Found in 1940 in San Joaquin County in a piece of Franciscan chert from the Coast Ranges washed into the Great Valley.
Plesiosaurus hesternus[23] Name means "one who is near to being a lizard of the West coast." Found in 1949 in San Luis Obispo County in a limestone concretion in Franciscan-Knoxville shales.

Economic importance edit

Although no significant accumulations of oil or gas have been found in the Franciscan, other opportunities have been exploited over the years. During the 19th century when gold mining was one of the main industries in California, cinnabar associated with serpentine in the Franciscan and Great Valley Group was mined for quicksilver (mercury) needed to process gold ore and gold-bearing gravels. Some of the more important mines were those at New Idria and New Almaden, the Sulphur Bank Mine at Clearlake Oaks, and the Knoxville Mine (cf. McLaughlin Mine) and others at Knoxville. The Franciscan also contains large bodies of limestone pure enough for making cement, and the Permanente Quarry near Cupertino, California is a giant open-pit mine in a body of Franciscan limestone that supplied most of the cement for building the Shasta Dam across the Sacramento River.[24] The Rockaway Quarry in Pacifica is another example of a major limestone quarry in the Franciscan.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Bailey, Irwin and Jones (1964), Franciscan and related rocks and their significance in the geology of western California. California Division of Mines and Geology, v. 183 p. 15-17.
  2. ^ Oregon Coast Range simplified geologic map
  3. ^ Tulane University - Regional Metamorphism
  4. ^ Irwin, William P. (1990). Wallace, Robert E. (ed.). "Geology and plate-tectonic Development". The San Andreas Fault System, California-U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper. 1515: 61–82.
  5. ^ Irwin, William P. (1990). Wallace, Robert E. (ed.). "Geology and plate-tectonic development". The San Andreas Fault System, California. U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper. 1515: 74.
  6. ^ HAMILTON, WARREN (1969). "Mesozoic California and the Underflow of Pacific Mantle". Geological Society of America Bulletin. 80 (12): 2409. Bibcode:1969GSAB...80.2409H. doi:10.1130/0016-7606(1969)80[2409:mcatuo]2.0.co;2. ISSN 0016-7606.
  7. ^ Bailey, Irwin and Jones (1964), p. 142-146; Blome and Irwin (1983), p. 77-89.
  8. ^ McLaughlin (1982), p. 595-605.
  9. ^ a b Mulcahy, Sean R.; Starnes, Jesslyn K.; Day, Howard W.; Coble, Matthew A.; Vervoort, Jeffrey D. (May 2018). "Early Onset of Franciscan Subduction". Tectonics. 37 (5): 1194–1209. Bibcode:2018Tecto..37.1194M. doi:10.1029/2017tc004753. ISSN 0278-7407.
  10. ^ a b c d e Wakabayashi, John (1992-01-01). "Nappes, Tectonics of Oblique Plate Convergence, and Metamorphic Evolution Related to 140 Million Years of Continuous Subduction, Franciscan Complex, California". The Journal of Geology. 100 (1): 19–40. Bibcode:1992JG....100...19W. doi:10.1086/629569. ISSN 0022-1376. S2CID 140552742.
  11. ^ Wentworth et al. (1984), p. 163-173; Irwin (1990), p. 61-82.
  12. ^ Wassmann, Sara; Stöckhert, Bernhard (2012-09-28). "Matrix deformation mechanisms in HP-LT tectonic mélanges — Microstructural record of jadeite blueschist from the Franciscan Complex, California". Tectonophysics. Chaos and Geodynamics: Melanges, Melange Forming Processes and Their Significance in the Geological Record. 568–569: 135–153. Bibcode:2012Tectp.568..135W. doi:10.1016/j.tecto.2012.01.009. ISSN 0040-1951.
  13. ^ Ernst, W. G. (1970). "Tectonic contact between the Franciscan Mélange and the Great Valley Sequence—Crustal expression of a Late Mesozoic Benioff Zone". Journal of Geophysical Research. 75 (5): 886–901. Bibcode:1970JGR....75..886E. doi:10.1029/JB075i005p00886. ISSN 2156-2202.
  14. ^ Turner, Francis J. (1981). Metamorphic petrology: mineralogical, field, and tectonic aspects (2d ed.). Washington: Hemisphere Pub. Corp. ISBN 0-07-065501-4. OCLC 5894059.
  15. ^ Wahrhaftig, Clyde (1984). A Streetcar to Subduction and Other Plate Tectonic Trips by Public Transport in San Francisco. Washington, D. C.: American Geophysical Union. doi:10.1029/sp022. ISBN 0-87590-234-0.
  16. ^ Hsü, K. Jinghwa (1968-08-01). "Principles of Mélanges and Their Bearing on the Franciscan-Knoxville Paradox". GSA Bulletin. 79 (8): 1063–1074. doi:10.1130/0016-7606(1968)79[1063:POMATB]2.0.CO;2. ISSN 0016-7606.
  17. ^ Wakabayashi, John (August 2011), "Mélanges of the Franciscan Complex, California: Diverse structural settings, evidence for sedimentary mixing, and their connection to subduction processes", Mélanges: Processes of Formation and Societal Significance, Geological Society of America Special Papers, vol. 480, Geological Society of America, pp. 117–141, doi:10.1130/2011.2480(05), ISBN 978-0-8137-2480-5
  18. ^ James O. Berkland (2), Loren A. Ray (1972). "What is Franciscan?". AAPG Bulletin. 56. doi:10.1306/819a421a-16c5-11d7-8645000102c1865d. ISSN 0149-1423.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  19. ^ Blake, M.C.; Howell, D.G.; Jones, David Lawrence (1982). "Preliminary tectonostratigraphic terrane map of California". Open-File Report. doi:10.3133/ofr82593. ISSN 2331-1258.
  20. ^ a b Bailey, Irwin and Jones (1965), p. 115-123; Blome and Irwin (1983), p. 77-89.
  21. ^ Hilton (2003), p. 223-225.
  22. ^ Tarduno et al. (1985), p. 345-347.
  23. ^ a b c Hilton (2003), "Appendix: Summary of the Mesozoic Reptilian Fossils of California," p. 272-273.
  24. ^ Austin, Donna (26 June 2009). "Kaiser dug for cement and hit aluminum foil". Cupertino News (newspaper - online edition). Retrieved 14 June 2013. Also see the following online anonymous article "Henry Kaiser's Legacy Woven into Rich California Tapestry". Kasier Permanente. 26 November 2009. Retrieved 14 June 2013.

References edit

  • Bailey, E.H.; Irwin, W.P.; Jones, D.L. (1964). "Franciscan and related rocks and their significance in the geology of western California". California Div. Mines and Geology Bull. 183: 177.
  • Berkland, J. O., Raymond, L. A., Kramer, J. C., Moores, E. M., & O'Day, M. (1972). "What is Franciscan?". AAPG Bulletin, 56(12), pp. 2295a-2302.
  • Blake, M.C.; Howell, D.G.; Jones, David Lawrence (1982). "Preliminary tectonostratigraphic terrane map of California". Open-File Report. doi:10.3133/ofr82593.
  • Blome, C.D.; Irwin, W.P. (1983). "Tectonic significance of late Paleozoic to Jurassic radiolarians from the North Fork terrane, Klamath Mountains, California". In Stevens, C.H. (ed.). Pre-Jurassic rocks in western North America suspect terranes. Pacific Section of the Society of Paleontologists and Mineralogists. pp. 77–89.
  • Ernst, W. G. (1970). "Tectonic contact between the Franciscan Mélange and the Great Valley Sequence-Crustal expression of a Late Mesozoic Benioff Zone". Journal of Geophysical Research. 75 (5): 886–901. Bibcode:1970JGR....75..886E. doi:10.1029/JB075i005p00886.
  • Hamilton, W. (1969). "Mesozoic California and the underflow of Pacific mantle". Geological Society of America Bulletin, 80(12), pp. 2409-2430.
  • Hilton, Richard P. (2003). Dinosaurs and Other Mesozoic Reptiles of California. Berkeley. University of California Press. 356 p. ISBN 978-0-520-23315-7.
  • Hsü, K. Jinghwa (1968). "Principles of Mélanges and Their Bearing on the Franciscan-Knoxville Paradox". Geological Society of America Bulletin. 79 (8): 1063. doi:10.1130/0016-7606(1968)79[1063:POMATB]2.0.CO;2. ISSN 0016-7606.
  • Irwin, William P. (1990). "Geology and plate-tectonic development". In Robert E. Wallace (ed.). The San Andreas Fault System, California. U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1515. pp. 61–82.
  • McLaughlin, R.J.; Kling, S.A.; Poore, R.Z.; McDougall, K.; Beutner, E.C. (1982). "Post-middle Miocene accretion of Franciscan rocks, northwestern California". Geological Society of America Bulletin. 93 (7): 595–605. Bibcode:1982GSAB...93..595M. doi:10.1130/0016-7606(1982)93<595:pmaofr>2.0.co;2.
    • Mulcahy, Sean R.; Starnes, Jesslyn K.; Day, Howard W.; Coble, Matthew A.; Vervoort, Jeffrey D. (2018). "Early Onset of Franciscan Subduction". Tectonics. 37 (5): 1194–1209. Bibcode:2018Tecto..37.1194M. doi:10.1029/2017TC004753.
  • Tarduno, John A.; McWilliams, M.; Debiche, M.G.; Sliter, W.V.; Blake, M.C. (1985). "Franciscan Complex Calera limestones: accreted remnants of Farallon Plate oceanic plateaus". Nature. 317 (6035): 345–347. Bibcode:1985Natur.317..345T. doi:10.1038/317345a0. S2CID 4350067.
  • Turner, F. J. (1981). Metamorphic petrology: Mineralogical, field, and tectonic aspects. Hemisphere Publishing Corporation. OCLC 5894059.
    • Wahrhaftig, Clyde (1984). A Streetcar to Subduction and Other Plate Tectonic Trips by Public Transport in San Francisco. doi:10.1029/SP022. ISBN 0-87590-234-0.
    • Wakabayashi, John (1992). "Nappes, Tectonics of Oblique Plate Convergence, and Metamorphic Evolution Related to 140 Million Years of Continuous Subduction, Franciscan Complex, California". The Journal of Geology. 100 (1): 19–40. Bibcode:1992JG....100...19W. doi:10.1086/629569. S2CID 140552742.
    • Wakabayashi, John (2011). "Mélanges of the Franciscan Complex, California: Diverse structural settings, evidence for sedimentary mixing, and their connection to subduction processes". Mélanges: Processes of Formation and Societal Significance. Geological Society of America Special Papers. Vol. 480. pp. 117–141. doi:10.1130/2011.2480(05). ISBN 978-0-8137-2480-5.
    • Wassmann, Sara; Stöckhert, Bernhard (2012). "Matrix deformation mechanisms in HP-LT tectonic mélanges — Microstructural record of jadeite blueschist from the Franciscan Complex, California". Tectonophysics. 568–569: 135–153. Bibcode:2012Tectp.568..135W. doi:10.1016/j.tecto.2012.01.009.
  • Wentworth, C. M.; Blake, M. C. Jr.; Jones, D. L.; Walter, A. W.; Zoback, M. D. (1984). "Tectonic wedging associated with emplacement of the Franciscan assemblage, California Coast Ranges". In Blake, M.C. (ed.). Franciscan geology of northern California. Pacific Section, Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists. Field Trip Guidebook 43, p. 163–173.

External links edit

  • San Andreas Discussion - Tectonic Wedging
  • Geology of the Golden Gate Headlands - National Park Service
  • Geology of San Francisco and Vicinity
  • The Geology of the Franciscan Complex in the Ward-Creek-Cazadero Area, Sonoma County, California by Rolfe C. Erickson

franciscan, complex, franciscan, assemblage, geologic, term, late, mesozoic, terrane, heterogeneous, rocks, found, throughout, california, coast, ranges, particularly, francisco, peninsula, named, geologist, andrew, lawson, also, named, andreas, fault, that, d. The Franciscan Complex or Franciscan Assemblage is a geologic term for a late Mesozoic terrane of heterogeneous rocks found throughout the California Coast Ranges and particularly on the San Francisco Peninsula It was named by geologist Andrew Lawson who also named the San Andreas fault that defines the western extent of the assemblage 1 Franciscan ComplexStratigraphic range Late Jurassic to Late CretaceousChevron folds in ribbon chert of the Marin Headlands California Geologist Christie Rowe for scale Typevaried primarily metamorphic low grade but also sedimentary igneous and high pressure metamorphicUnderliesvariousOverliesbasement Coast Range Ophiolite in some areasLithologyPrimaryschist incl serpentinite sandstone basalt greywackesOthershale chertLocationRegionCalifornia Coast Ranges northern Transverse RangesCountryUnited StatesType sectionNamed forSan Francisco California The Franciscan Complex is dominated by greywacke sandstones shales and conglomerates which have experienced low grade metamorphism Other important lithologies include chert basalt limestone serpentinite and high pressure low temperature metabasites blueschists and eclogites and meta limestones Fossils like radiolaria are found in chert beds of the Franciscan Complex These fossils have been used to provide age constraints on the different terranes that constitute the Franciscan The mining opportunities within the Franciscan are restricted to deposits of cinnabar and limestone The outcrops of the formation have a very large range extending from Douglas County Oregon to Santa Barbara County California 2 Franciscan like formations may be as far south as Santa Catalina Island The formation lends its name to the term describing high pressure regional metamorphic facies the Franciscan facies series 3 Contents 1 Geologic history 2 Description 2 1 Gallery 3 Fossils 4 Economic importance 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksGeologic history edit nbsp Map modified from Irwin 1990 4 showing distribution of Great Valley Sequence and Franciscan Complex in blue nbsp Diagram modified from Fig 3 11 in Irwin 1990 showing the depositional setting of the Franciscan Assemblage and the contemporaneous Great Valley Sequence 5 The Franciscan Complex is an assemblage of metamorphosed and deformed rocks associated with east dipping subduction zone at the western coast of North America 6 Although most of the Franciscan is Early Late Jurassic through Cretaceous in age 150 66 Ma 7 some Franciscan rocks are as old as early Jurassic 180 190 Ma age and as young as Miocene 15 Ma 8 The different age distribution represents the temporal and spatial variation of mechanisms that operated within the subduction zone 9 Franciscan rocks are thought to have formed prior to the creation of the San Andreas Fault when an ancient deep sea trench existed along the California continental margin This trench the remnants of which are still active in the Cascadia and Cocos subduction zone resulted from subduction of oceanic crust of the Farallon tectonic plate beneath continental crust of the North American Plate As oceanic crust descended beneath the continent ocean floor basalt and sediments were subducted and then tectonically underplated to the upper plate 10 This resulted in widespread deformation with the generation of thrust faults and folding and caused high pressure low temperature regional metamorphism 10 In the Miocene the Farallon Pacific spreading center reached the Franciscan trench and the relative motion between Pacific North America caused the initiation of the San Andreas Fault Transform motion along the San Andreas Fault obscured and displaced the subduction related structures resulting in overprinting of two generations of structures 11 Description edit nbsp Shale matrix melange with clasts of sandstone and greenstone on Marshall s Beach San Francisco The units of the Franciscan complex are aligned parallel to the active margin between the North American and Pacific plates 12 The Franciscan Complex is in contact with the Great Valley Sequence which was deposited on the Coast Range Ophiolite along its eastern side 13 14 The type area of Franciscan rocks in San Francisco consists of metagraywackes gray claystone and shale thin bedded ribbon chert with abundant radiolarians altered submarine pillow basalts greenstone and blueschists 15 Broadly the Franciscan can be divided into two groups of rocks Coherent terranes are internally consistent in metamorphic grade and include folded and faulted clastic sediments cherts and basalts ranging from sub metamorphic to prehnite pumpellyite or low temperature blueschist jadeite bearing grades of metamorphism Melange terranes are much smaller found between or within the larger coherent terranes and sometimes contain large blocks of metabasic rocks of higher metamorphic grade amphibolite eclogite and garnet blueschist 10 The melange zones in the Franciscan usually have a block in matrix appearance with higher grade metamorphic blocks blueschist amphibolite greenschist eclogite embedded within the melange matrix 16 The matrix material of the melanges are mudstone or serpentinite Geologists have argued for either a tectonic or olistostormal origin 17 In the northern Coast Ranges the Franciscan has been divided into the Eastern Central and Coastal Belts based on metamorphic age and grade with the rocks younging and the metamorphic grade decreasing to the west 18 19 10 The Franciscan varies along strike because individual accreted elements packets of trench sediment seamounts etc did not extend the full length of the trench Different depths of underplating distribution of post metamorphic faulting and level of erosion produced the present day surface distribution of high P T metamorphism 9 10 Gallery edit nbsp Ribbon Chert of the Marin Headlands Terrane exposed at Marshall s Beach San Francisco nbsp Pillow structures preserved in greenschist facies metamorphosed basalts of the FranciscanComplex Black Sands Beach Marin Headlands California Field of view is approximately 2 m wide nbsp Folded blue metacherts with glaucophane rich layers exposed in outcrops on Kayak Beach Angel Island northern San Francisco Bay nbsp Sheared block in matrix fabric composed of serpentinite blocks in serpentinite matrix exposed on Perles Beach Angel Island Marin County California Pencil for scale The strong anastomosing foliation is folded sub vertical in the lower part of the photo and more gently dipping in the upper part of the photo nbsp Shale matrix melange of the Franciscan Complex at Marshall s Beach San Francisco California Sandstone blocks light grey contain white mineral veins Dark grey shale matrix displays strongly foliated anastomosing scaly fabric Geologist John Wakabayashi for scale Fossils editFranciscan sediments contain a sparse but diverse assemblage of fossils The most abundant fossils by far are microfossils particularly in the cherts which contain single celled organisms called radiolarians that have exoskeletons of silica There are also in some of the shales microfossils of planktonic foraminifera that have exoskeletons of carbonate These microfossils by and large indicate deposition in an open water setting where deep water conditions exist 20 Vertebrate fossils in the Franciscan are extremely rare but include three Mesozoic marine reptiles that are shown in the table below 21 Again these indicate an open water and therefore deep marine setting Although rare a few shallow marine fossils have been found as well and include extinct oysters Inoceramus and clams Buchia 20 Microfossils in the Calera Limestone member of the Franciscan exposed at the Permanente and Pacifica cement quarries also indicate a shallow marine setting with deposition on top of a seamount in the tropical Pacific Ocean and subsequent transport and accretion by the Pacific Plate onto the California continental margin 22 Thus even though most of the Franciscan appears to have been deposited in a deep water setting it is a complex and diverse assemblage of rocks and shallow water settings though not the norm existed as well Mesozoic Vertebrate Fossils of the Franciscan Complex Genus Species Notes Ichthyosaurus californicus 23 Name means fish lizard of California Found in 1935 in Stanislaus County in a piece of Franciscan chert from the Coast Ranges washed into the Great Valley franciscanus 23 Name means fish lizard of the Franciscan Found in 1940 in San Joaquin County in a piece of Franciscan chert from the Coast Ranges washed into the Great Valley Plesiosaurus hesternus 23 Name means one who is near to being a lizard of the West coast Found in 1949 in San Luis Obispo County in a limestone concretion in Franciscan Knoxville shales Economic importance editAlthough no significant accumulations of oil or gas have been found in the Franciscan other opportunities have been exploited over the years During the 19th century when gold mining was one of the main industries in California cinnabar associated with serpentine in the Franciscan and Great Valley Group was mined for quicksilver mercury needed to process gold ore and gold bearing gravels Some of the more important mines were those at New Idria and New Almaden the Sulphur Bank Mine at Clearlake Oaks and the Knoxville Mine cf McLaughlin Mine and others at Knoxville The Franciscan also contains large bodies of limestone pure enough for making cement and the Permanente Quarry near Cupertino California is a giant open pit mine in a body of Franciscan limestone that supplied most of the cement for building the Shasta Dam across the Sacramento River 24 The Rockaway Quarry in Pacifica is another example of a major limestone quarry in the Franciscan See also editCalifornia landslides Farallon Plate Ancient oceanic plate that has mostly subducted under the North American Plate Great Valley Sequence Group of late Mesozoic formations in the Central Valley of California Subduction A geological process at convergent tectonic plate boundaries where one plate moves under the other Accretionary prismNotes edit Bailey Irwin and Jones 1964 Franciscan and related rocks and their significance in the geology of western California California Division of Mines and Geology v 183 p 15 17 Oregon Coast Range simplified geologic map Tulane University Regional Metamorphism Irwin William P 1990 Wallace Robert E ed Geology and plate tectonic Development The San Andreas Fault System California U S Geological Survey Professional Paper 1515 61 82 Irwin William P 1990 Wallace Robert E ed Geology and plate tectonic development The San Andreas Fault System California U S Geological Survey Professional Paper 1515 74 HAMILTON WARREN 1969 Mesozoic California and the Underflow of Pacific Mantle Geological Society of America Bulletin 80 12 2409 Bibcode 1969GSAB 80 2409H doi 10 1130 0016 7606 1969 80 2409 mcatuo 2 0 co 2 ISSN 0016 7606 Bailey Irwin and Jones 1964 p 142 146 Blome and Irwin 1983 p 77 89 McLaughlin 1982 p 595 605 a b Mulcahy Sean R Starnes Jesslyn K Day Howard W Coble Matthew A Vervoort Jeffrey D May 2018 Early Onset of Franciscan Subduction Tectonics 37 5 1194 1209 Bibcode 2018Tecto 37 1194M doi 10 1029 2017tc004753 ISSN 0278 7407 a b c d e Wakabayashi John 1992 01 01 Nappes Tectonics of Oblique Plate Convergence and Metamorphic Evolution Related to 140 Million Years of Continuous Subduction Franciscan Complex California The Journal of Geology 100 1 19 40 Bibcode 1992JG 100 19W doi 10 1086 629569 ISSN 0022 1376 S2CID 140552742 Wentworth et al 1984 p 163 173 Irwin 1990 p 61 82 Wassmann Sara Stockhert Bernhard 2012 09 28 Matrix deformation mechanisms in HP LT tectonic melanges Microstructural record of jadeite blueschist from the Franciscan Complex California Tectonophysics Chaos and Geodynamics Melanges Melange Forming Processes and Their Significance in the Geological Record 568 569 135 153 Bibcode 2012Tectp 568 135W doi 10 1016 j tecto 2012 01 009 ISSN 0040 1951 Ernst W G 1970 Tectonic contact between the Franciscan Melange and the Great Valley Sequence Crustal expression of a Late Mesozoic Benioff Zone Journal of Geophysical Research 75 5 886 901 Bibcode 1970JGR 75 886E doi 10 1029 JB075i005p00886 ISSN 2156 2202 Turner Francis J 1981 Metamorphic petrology mineralogical field and tectonic aspects 2d ed Washington Hemisphere Pub Corp ISBN 0 07 065501 4 OCLC 5894059 Wahrhaftig Clyde 1984 A Streetcar to Subduction and Other Plate Tectonic Trips by Public Transport in San Francisco Washington D C American Geophysical Union doi 10 1029 sp022 ISBN 0 87590 234 0 Hsu K Jinghwa 1968 08 01 Principles of Melanges and Their Bearing on the Franciscan Knoxville Paradox GSA Bulletin 79 8 1063 1074 doi 10 1130 0016 7606 1968 79 1063 POMATB 2 0 CO 2 ISSN 0016 7606 Wakabayashi John August 2011 Melanges of the Franciscan Complex California Diverse structural settings evidence for sedimentary mixing and their connection to subduction processes Melanges Processes of Formation and Societal Significance Geological Society of America Special Papers vol 480 Geological Society of America pp 117 141 doi 10 1130 2011 2480 05 ISBN 978 0 8137 2480 5 James O Berkland 2 Loren A Ray 1972 What is Franciscan AAPG Bulletin 56 doi 10 1306 819a421a 16c5 11d7 8645000102c1865d ISSN 0149 1423 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Blake M C Howell D G Jones David Lawrence 1982 Preliminary tectonostratigraphic terrane map of California Open File Report doi 10 3133 ofr82593 ISSN 2331 1258 a b Bailey Irwin and Jones 1965 p 115 123 Blome and Irwin 1983 p 77 89 Hilton 2003 p 223 225 Tarduno et al 1985 p 345 347 a b c Hilton 2003 Appendix Summary of the Mesozoic Reptilian Fossils of California p 272 273 Austin Donna 26 June 2009 Kaiser dug for cement and hit aluminum foil Cupertino News newspaper online edition Retrieved 14 June 2013 Also see the following online anonymous article Henry Kaiser s Legacy Woven into Rich California Tapestry Kasier Permanente 26 November 2009 Retrieved 14 June 2013 References editBailey E H Irwin W P Jones D L 1964 Franciscan and related rocks and their significance in the geology of western California California Div Mines and Geology Bull 183 177 Berkland J O Raymond L A Kramer J C Moores E M amp O Day M 1972 What is Franciscan AAPG Bulletin 56 12 pp 2295a 2302 Blake M C Howell D G Jones David Lawrence 1982 Preliminary tectonostratigraphic terrane map of California Open File Report doi 10 3133 ofr82593 Blome C D Irwin W P 1983 Tectonic significance of late Paleozoic to Jurassic radiolarians from the North Fork terrane Klamath Mountains California In Stevens C H ed Pre Jurassic rocks in western North America suspect terranes Pacific Section of the Society of Paleontologists and Mineralogists pp 77 89 Ernst W G 1970 Tectonic contact between the Franciscan Melange and the Great Valley Sequence Crustal expression of a Late Mesozoic Benioff Zone Journal of Geophysical Research 75 5 886 901 Bibcode 1970JGR 75 886E doi 10 1029 JB075i005p00886 Hamilton W 1969 Mesozoic California and the underflow of Pacific mantle Geological Society of America Bulletin 80 12 pp 2409 2430 Hilton Richard P 2003 Dinosaurs and Other Mesozoic Reptiles of California Berkeley University of California Press 356 p ISBN 978 0 520 23315 7 Hsu K Jinghwa 1968 Principles of Melanges and Their Bearing on the Franciscan Knoxville Paradox Geological Society of America Bulletin 79 8 1063 doi 10 1130 0016 7606 1968 79 1063 POMATB 2 0 CO 2 ISSN 0016 7606 Irwin William P 1990 Geology and plate tectonic development In Robert E Wallace ed The San Andreas Fault System California U S Geological Survey Professional Paper 1515 pp 61 82 McLaughlin R J Kling S A Poore R Z McDougall K Beutner E C 1982 Post middle Miocene accretion of Franciscan rocks northwestern California Geological Society of America Bulletin 93 7 595 605 Bibcode 1982GSAB 93 595M doi 10 1130 0016 7606 1982 93 lt 595 pmaofr gt 2 0 co 2 Mulcahy Sean R Starnes Jesslyn K Day Howard W Coble Matthew A Vervoort Jeffrey D 2018 Early Onset of Franciscan Subduction Tectonics 37 5 1194 1209 Bibcode 2018Tecto 37 1194M doi 10 1029 2017TC004753 Tarduno John A McWilliams M Debiche M G Sliter W V Blake M C 1985 Franciscan Complex Calera limestones accreted remnants of Farallon Plate oceanic plateaus Nature 317 6035 345 347 Bibcode 1985Natur 317 345T doi 10 1038 317345a0 S2CID 4350067 Turner F J 1981 Metamorphic petrology Mineralogical field and tectonic aspects Hemisphere Publishing Corporation OCLC 5894059 Wahrhaftig Clyde 1984 A Streetcar to Subduction and Other Plate Tectonic Trips by Public Transport in San Francisco doi 10 1029 SP022 ISBN 0 87590 234 0 Wakabayashi John 1992 Nappes Tectonics of Oblique Plate Convergence and Metamorphic Evolution Related to 140 Million Years of Continuous Subduction Franciscan Complex California The Journal of Geology 100 1 19 40 Bibcode 1992JG 100 19W doi 10 1086 629569 S2CID 140552742 Wakabayashi John 2011 Melanges of the Franciscan Complex California Diverse structural settings evidence for sedimentary mixing and their connection to subduction processes Melanges Processes of Formation and Societal Significance Geological Society of America Special Papers Vol 480 pp 117 141 doi 10 1130 2011 2480 05 ISBN 978 0 8137 2480 5 Wassmann Sara Stockhert Bernhard 2012 Matrix deformation mechanisms in HP LT tectonic melanges Microstructural record of jadeite blueschist from the Franciscan Complex California Tectonophysics 568 569 135 153 Bibcode 2012Tectp 568 135W doi 10 1016 j tecto 2012 01 009 Wentworth C M Blake M C Jr Jones D L Walter A W Zoback M D 1984 Tectonic wedging associated with emplacement of the Franciscan assemblage California Coast Ranges In Blake M C ed Franciscan geology of northern California Pacific Section Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists Field Trip Guidebook 43 p 163 173 External links editSan Andreas Discussion Tectonic Wedging Geology of the Golden Gate Headlands National Park Service Geology of San Francisco and Vicinity The Geology of the Franciscan Complex in the Ward Creek Cazadero Area Sonoma County California by Rolfe C Erickson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Franciscan Complex amp oldid 1175684738, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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