Dataset Identification:
Resource Abstract:
- description: This part of DS 781 presents data for the geologic and geomorphic map of the Offshore of Tomales Point map area,
California. The vector data file is included in "Geology_OffshoreTomalesPoint.zip," which is accessible from http://pubs.usgs.gov/ds/781/OffshoreTomalesPoint/data_catalog_OffshoreTomalesPoint.html.
The morphology and the geology of the offshore part of the Offshore of Tomales Point map area result from the interplay between
tectonics, sea-level rise, local sedimentary processes, and oceanography. The map area is cut by the northwest-trending San
Andreas Fault, the right-lateral transform boundary between the North American and Pacific tectonic plates. The San Andreas
strikes through Tomales Bay, the northern part of a linear valley that extends from Bolinas through Olema Valley to Bodega
Bay, separating mainland California from the Point Reyes Peninsula. Onshore investigations indicate that this section of the
San Andreas Fault has an estimated slip rate of about 17 to 25 mm/yr (Bryant and Lundberg, 2002; Grove and Niemi, 2005). The
devastating Great 1906 California earthquake (M 7.8) is thought to have nucleated on the San Andreas Fault about 50 kilometers
south of this map area offshore of San Francisco (e.g., Bolt, 1968; Lomax, 2005), with the rupture extending northward through
the Offshore of Tomales Point map area to the south flank of Cape Mendocino (Lawson, 1908; Brown and Wolfe, 1972). The Point
Reyes Peninsula is bounded to the south and west in the offshore by the north- and east-dipping Point Reyes Thrust Fault (McCulloch,
1987; Heck and others, 1990), which lies about 20 km west of Tomales Point. Granitic basement rocks are offset about 1.4 km
on this thrust fault offshore of Point Reyes (McCulloch, 1987), and this uplift combined with west-side-up offset on the San
Andreas Fault (Grove and Niemi, 2005) resulted in uplift of the Point Reyes Peninsula, including Tomales Point and the adjacent
continental shelf. Grove and others (2010) reported uplift rates of as much as 1 mm/yr for the south flank of the Point Reyes
Peninsula based on marine terraces, but reported no datable terrace surfaces that could constrain uplift for the flight of
4-5 terraces exposed farther north along Tomales Point. Because of this Quaternary uplift and relative lack of sediment supply
from coastal watersheds, there is extensive rugged, rocky seafloor beneath the continental shelf in the Offshore of Tomales
Point map area. Granitic rocks (unit Kg) on the seafloor are mapped on the basis of massive character, roughness, extensive
fractures, and high backscatter (see Backscattter A to D--Offshore of Tomales Point, California, DS 781, for more information).
Neogene sedimentary rocks (units Tl and Tu) commonly form distinctive "ribs," created by differential seafloor erosion
of dipping beds of variable resistance. The more massive offshore outcrops of unit Tu in the southern part of the map area
are inferred to represent more uniform lithologies. Slopes on the granitic seafloor (generally 1 to 1.3 degrees) are greater
than those over sedimentary rock (generally about 0.5 to 0.6 degrees). Sediment-covered areas occur in gently sloping (less
than about 0.6 degrees) mid-shelf environments west and north of Tomales Point, and at the mouth of Tomales Bay. Sediment
supply is local, limited to erosion from local coastal bluffs and dunes, small coastal watersheds, and sediment flux out of
the mouth of Tomales Bay. Shelf morphology and evolution largely reflects eustacy; sea level has risen about 125 to 130 m
over about the last 21,000 years (for example, Lambeck and Chappell, 2001; Peltier and Fairbanks, 2005), leading to broadening
of the continental shelf, progressive eastward migration of the shoreline and wave-cut platform, and associated transgressive
erosion and deposition. Given present exposure to high wave energy, modern nearshore to mid-shelf sediments are mostly sand
(unit Qms) and a mix of sand, gravel, and cobbles (units Qmsc and Qmsd). These sediments are distributed between rocky outcrops
at water depths of as much as 65 m (see below). The more coarse-grained sands and gravels (units Qmsc and Qmsd) are primarily
recognized on the basis of bathymetry and high backscatter. Unit Qmsd forms erosional lags in scoured depressions that are
bounded by relatively sharp contacts with bedrock or sharp to diffuse contacts with units Qms and Qmsc. These scoured depressions
are typically a few tens of centimeters deep and range in size from a few 10's of sq m to more than one sq km. Similar
unit Qmsd scour depressions are common along this stretch of the California coast (see, for example, Cacchione and others,
1984; Hallenbeck and others, 2012) where surficial offshore sandy sediment is relatively thin (thus unable to fill the depressions)
due to both lack of sediment supply and to erosion and transport of sediment during large northwest winter swells. Such features
have been referred to as rippled-scour depressions (see, for example, Cacchione and others, 1984) or sorted bedforms (see,
for example, Goff and others, 2005; Trembanis and Hume, 2011). Although the general areas in which both unit Qmsd scour depressions
and surrounding mobile sand sheets occur are not likely to change substantially, the boundaries of the individual Qmsd depressions
are likely ephemeral, changing seasonally and during significant storm events. Unit Qmsf consists primarily of mud and muddy
sand and is commonly extensively bioturbated. The location of the inboard contact at water depths of about 65 m is based on
meager sediment sampling and photographic data and the inference that if must lie offshore of the outer boundary of coarse-grained
units Qmsd and Qmsc. This is notably deeper than the inner contact of unit Qmsf offshore of the nearby Russian River (about
50 m; Klise, 1983) which could may reflect both increased wave energy and significantly decreased supply of muddy sediment.
There are two areas of high-backscatter, rough seafloor at water depths of 65 to 70 m west of northern Tomales Point. These
areas are notable in that each includes several small (less than about 20,000 sq m), randomly distributed to northwest-trending,
irregular "mounds," with as much as 1 m of positive relief above the seafloor (unit Qsr). Seismic-reflection data
(see field activity S-15-10-NC) reveal this lumpy material rests on several meters of latest Pleistoce to Holocene sediment
and is thus not bedrock outcrop. Rather, it seems likely that this material is marine debris, possibly derived from one (or
more) of the more than 60 shipwrecks that have occurred offshore of the Point Reyes Peninsula between 1849 and 1940 (National
Park Service, 2012). It is also conceivable that this lumpy terrane consists of biological "hardgrounds" Units Qsw,
Qstb, Qdtb, and Qsdtb comprise sediments in Tomales Bay. Anima and others (2008) conducted a high-resolution bathymetric survey
of Tomales Bay and noted that strong tidal currents at the mouth of the bay had created a large field of sandwaves, dunes,
and flats (unit Qsw). Unit Qkdtb is a small subaqueous sandy delta deposited at the mouth of Keys Creek, the largest coastal
watershed draining into this northern part of Tomales Bay. Unit Qstb occurs south of units Qsw and Qdtb, and comprises largely
flat seafloor underlain by mixed sand and silt. Unit Qdtb consists of depressions within the sedimentary fill of Tomales Bay.
These depressions commonly occur directly offshore of coastal promontories, cover as much as 74,000 sq m, and are as deep
as 9 m. Map unit polygons were digitized over underlying 2-meter base layers developed from multibeam bathymetry and backscatter
data (see Bathymetry--Offshore of Tomales Point, California and Backscattter A to D--Offshore of Tomales Point, California,
DS 781). The bathymetry and backscatter data were collected between 2006 and 2010. References Cited Anima, R. A., Chin, J.L.,
Finlayson, D.P., McGann, M.L., and Wong, F.L., 2008, Interferometric sidescan bathymetry, sediment and foraminiferal analyses;
a new look at Tomales Bay, Califorina: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2008 - 1237, 33 p. Brown, R.D., Jr., and Wolfe,
E.W., 1972, Map showing recently active breaks along the San Andreas Fault between Point Delgada and Bolinas Bay, California:
U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Investigations Map I-692, scale 1:24,000. Bryant, W.A., and Lundberg, M.M., compilers,
2002, Fault number 1b, San Andreas fault zone, North Coast section, in Quaternary fault and fold database of the United States:
U.S. Geological Survey website, accessed April 4, 2013 at http://earthquakes.usgs.gov/hazards/qfaults. Cacchione, D.A., Drake,
D.E., Grant, W.D., and Tate, G.B., 1984, Rippled scour depressions of the inner continental shelf off central California:
Journal of Sedimentary Petrology, v. 54, p. 1,280-1,291. Grove, K., and Niemi, T.M., 2005, Late Quaternary deformation and
slip rates in the northern San Andreas fault zone at Olema Valley, Marin County, California: Tectonophysics, v. 401, p. 231-250.
Grove, K, Sklar, L.S., Scherer, A.M., Lee, G., and Davis, J., 2010, Accelerating and spatially-varying crustal uplift and
its geomorphic expression, San Andreas fault zone north of San Francisco, California: Tectonophysics, v. 495, p. 256-268.
Klise, D.H., 1984, Modern sedimentation on the California continental margin adjacent to the Russian River: M.S. thesis, San
Jose State University, 120 p. Hallenbeck, T.R., Kvitek, R.G., and Lindholm, J., 2012, Rippled scour depressions add ecologically
significant heterogeneity to soft-bottom habitats on the continental shelf: Marine Ecology Progress Series, v. 468, p. 119-133.
Lambeck, K., and Chappell, J., 2001, Sea level change through the last glacial cycle: Science, v. 292, p. 679-686, doi: 10.1126/science.1059549.
Lawson, A.C., ed., 1908, The California earthquake of April 18, 1906, Report of the State Earthquake Investigation Commission:
Carnegie Institution of Washington Publication 87, v. 1, 1451 p. and atlas. Lomax, A., 2005, A reanalysis of the hypocentral
location and related observations for the Great 1906 California earthquake: Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America,
v. 95, p. 861-877. McCulloch, D.S., 1987, Regional geology and hydrocarbon potential of offshore central California, in Scholl,
D.W., Grantz, A., and Vedder, J.G., eds., Geology and Resource Potential of the Continental Margin of Western North America
and Adjacent Oceans -- Beaufort Sea to Baja California: Houston, Texas, Circum-Pacific Council for Energy and Mineral Resources,
Earth Science Series, v. 6., p. 353-401. National Park Service, 2012, Shipwrecks at Point Reyes, accessed May 1, 2013 at:
http://www.nps.gov/pore/historyculture/upload/map_shipwrecks.pdf; abstract: This part of DS 781 presents data for the geologic
and geomorphic map of the Offshore of Tomales Point map area, California. The vector data file is included in "Geology_OffshoreTomalesPoint.zip,"
which is accessible from http://pubs.usgs.gov/ds/781/OffshoreTomalesPoint/data_catalog_OffshoreTomalesPoint.html. The morphology
and the geology of the offshore part of the Offshore of Tomales Point map area result from the interplay between tectonics,
sea-level rise, local sedimentary processes, and oceanography. The map area is cut by the northwest-trending San Andreas Fault,
the right-lateral transform boundary between the North American and Pacific tectonic plates. The San Andreas strikes through
Tomales Bay, the northern part of a linear valley that extends from Bolinas through Olema Valley to Bodega Bay, separating
mainland California from the Point Reyes Peninsula. Onshore investigations indicate that this section of the San Andreas Fault
has an estimated slip rate of about 17 to 25 mm/yr (Bryant and Lundberg, 2002; Grove and Niemi, 2005). The devastating Great
1906 California earthquake (M 7.8) is thought to have nucleated on the San Andreas Fault about 50 kilometers south of this
map area offshore of San Francisco (e.g., Bolt, 1968; Lomax, 2005), with the rupture extending northward through the Offshore
of Tomales Point map area to the south flank of Cape Mendocino (Lawson, 1908; Brown and Wolfe, 1972). The Point Reyes Peninsula
is bounded to the south and west in the offshore by the north- and east-dipping Point Reyes Thrust Fault (McCulloch, 1987;
Heck and others, 1990), which lies about 20 km west of Tomales Point. Granitic basement rocks are offset about 1.4 km on this
thrust fault offshore of Point Reyes (McCulloch, 1987), and this uplift combined with west-side-up offset on the San Andreas
Fault (Grove and Niemi, 2005) resulted in uplift of the Point Reyes Peninsula, including Tomales Point and the adjacent continental
shelf. Grove and others (2010) reported uplift rates of as much as 1 mm/yr for the south flank of the Point Reyes Peninsula
based on marine terraces, but reported no datable terrace surfaces that could constrain uplift for the flight of 4-5 terraces
exposed farther north along Tomales Point. Because of this Quaternary uplift and relative lack of sediment supply from coastal
watersheds, there is extensive rugged, rocky seafloor beneath the continental shelf in the Offshore of Tomales Point map area.
Granitic rocks (unit Kg) on the seafloor are mapped on the basis of massive character, roughness, extensive fractures, and
high backscatter (see Backscattter A to D--Offshore of Tomales Point, California, DS 781, for more information). Neogene sedimentary
rocks (units Tl and Tu) commonly form distinctive "ribs," created by differential seafloor erosion of dipping beds
of variable resistance. The more massive offshore outcrops of unit Tu in the southern part of the map area are inferred to
represent more uniform lithologies. Slopes on the granitic seafloor (generally 1 to 1.3 degrees) are greater than those over
sedimentary rock (generally about 0.5 to 0.6 degrees). Sediment-covered areas occur in gently sloping (less than about 0.6
degrees) mid-shelf environments west and north of Tomales Point, and at the mouth of Tomales Bay. Sediment supply is local,
limited to erosion from local coastal bluffs and dunes, small coastal watersheds, and sediment flux out of the mouth of Tomales
Bay. Shelf morphology and evolution largely reflects eustacy; sea level has risen about 125 to 130 m over about the last 21,000
years (for example, Lambeck and Chappell, 2001; Peltier and Fairbanks, 2005), leading to broadening of the continental shelf,
progressive eastward migration of the shoreline and wave-cut platform, and associated transgressive erosion and deposition.
Given present exposure to high wave energy, modern nearshore to mid-shelf sediments are mostly sand (unit Qms) and a mix of
sand, gravel, and cobbles (units Qmsc and Qmsd). These sediments are distributed between rocky outcrops at water depths of
as much as 65 m (see below). The more coarse-grained sands and gravels (units Qmsc and Qmsd) are primarily recognized on the
basis of bathymetry and high backscatter. Unit Qmsd forms erosional lags in scoured depressions that are bounded by relatively
sharp contacts with bedrock or sharp to diffuse contacts with units Qms and Qmsc. These scoured depressions are typically
a few tens of centimeters deep and range in size from a few 10's of sq m to more than one sq km. Similar unit Qmsd scour
depressions are common along this stretch of the California coast (see, for example, Cacchione and others, 1984; Hallenbeck
and others, 2012) where surficial offshore sandy sediment is relatively thin (thus unable to fill the depressions) due to
both lack of sediment supply and to erosion and transport of sediment during large northwest winter swells. Such features
have been referred to as rippled-scour depressions (see, for example, Cacchione and others, 1984) or sorted bedforms (see,
for example, Goff and others, 2005; Trembanis and Hume, 2011). Although the general areas in which both unit Qmsd scour depressions
and surrounding mobile sand sheets occur are not likely to change substantially, the boundaries of the individual Qmsd depressions
are likely ephemeral, changing seasonally and during significant storm events. Unit Qmsf consists primarily of mud and muddy
sand and is commonly extensively bioturbated. The location of the inboard contact at water depths of about 65 m is based on
meager sediment sampling and photographic data and the inference that if must lie offshore of the outer boundary of coarse-grained
units Qmsd and Qmsc. This is notably deeper than the inner contact of unit Qmsf offshore of the nearby Russian River (about
50 m; Klise, 1983) which could may reflect both increased wave energy and significantly decreased supply of muddy sediment.
There are two areas of high-backscatter, rough seafloor at water depths of 65 to 70 m west of northern Tomales Point. These
areas are notable in that each includes several small (less than about 20,000 sq m), randomly distributed to northwest-trending,
irregular "mounds," with as much as 1 m of positive relief above the seafloor (unit Qsr). Seismic-reflection data
(see field activity S-15-10-NC) reveal this lumpy material rests on several meters of latest Pleistoce to Holocene sediment
and is thus not bedrock outcrop. Rather, it seems likely that this material is marine debris, possibly derived from one (or
more) of the more than 60 shipwrecks that have occurred offshore of the Point Reyes Peninsula between 1849 and 1940 (National
Park Service, 2012). It is also conceivable that this lumpy terrane consists of biological "hardgrounds" Units Qsw,
Qstb, Qdtb, and Qsdtb comprise sediments in Tomales Bay. Anima and others (2008) conducted a high-resolution bathymetric survey
of Tomales Bay and noted that strong tidal currents at the mouth of the bay had created a large field of sandwaves, dunes,
and flats (unit Qsw). Unit Qkdtb is a small subaqueous sandy delta deposited at the mouth of Keys Creek, the largest coastal
watershed draining into this northern part of Tomales Bay. Unit Qstb occurs south of units Qsw and Qdtb, and comprises largely
flat seafloor underlain by mixed sand and silt. Unit Qdtb consists of depressions within the sedimentary fill of Tomales Bay.
These depressions commonly occur directly offshore of coastal promontories, cover as much as 74,000 sq m, and are as deep
as 9 m. Map unit polygons were digitized over underlying 2-meter base layers developed from multibeam bathymetry and backscatter
data (see Bathymetry--Offshore of Tomales Point, California and Backscattter A to D--Offshore of Tomales Point, California,
DS 781). The bathymetry and backscatter data were collected between 2006 and 2010. References Cited Anima, R. A., Chin, J.L.,
Finlayson, D.P., McGann, M.L., and Wong, F.L., 2008, Interferometric sidescan bathymetry, sediment and foraminiferal analyses;
a new look at Tomales Bay, Califorina: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2008 - 1237, 33 p. Brown, R.D., Jr., and Wolfe,
E.W., 1972, Map showing recently active breaks along the San Andreas Fault between Point Delgada and Bolinas Bay, California:
U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Investigations Map I-692, scale 1:24,000. Bryant, W.A., and Lundberg, M.M., compilers,
2002, Fault number 1b, San Andreas fault zone, North Coast section, in Quaternary fault and fold database of the United States:
U.S. Geological Survey website, accessed April 4, 2013 at http://earthquakes.usgs.gov/hazards/qfaults. Cacchione, D.A., Drake,
D.E., Grant, W.D., and Tate, G.B., 1984, Rippled scour depressions of the inner continental shelf off central California:
Journal of Sedimentary Petrology, v. 54, p. 1,280-1,291. Grove, K., and Niemi, T.M., 2005, Late Quaternary deformation and
slip rates in the northern San Andreas fault zone at Olema Valley, Marin County, California: Tectonophysics, v. 401, p. 231-250.
Grove, K, Sklar, L.S., Scherer, A.M., Lee, G., and Davis, J., 2010, Accelerating and spatially-varying crustal uplift and
its geomorphic expression, San Andreas fault zone north of San Francisco, California: Tectonophysics, v. 495, p. 256-268.
Klise, D.H., 1984, Modern sedimentation on the California continental margin adjacent to the Russian River: M.S. thesis, San
Jose State University, 120 p. Hallenbeck, T.R., Kvitek, R.G., and Lindholm, J., 2012, Rippled scour depressions add ecologically
significant heterogeneity to soft-bottom habitats on the continental shelf: Marine Ecology Progress Series, v. 468, p. 119-133.
Lambeck, K., and Chappell, J., 2001, Sea level change through the last glacial cycle: Science, v. 292, p. 679-686, doi: 10.1126/science.1059549.
Lawson, A.C., ed., 1908, The California earthquake of April 18, 1906, Report of the State Earthquake Investigation Commission:
Carnegie Institution of Washington Publication 87, v. 1, 1451 p. and atlas. Lomax, A., 2005, A reanalysis of the hypocentral
location and related observations for the Great 1906 California earthquake: Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America,
v. 95, p. 861-877. McCulloch, D.S., 1987, Regional geology and hydrocarbon potential of offshore central California, in Scholl,
D.W., Grantz, A., and Vedder, J.G., eds., Geology and Resource Potential of the Continental Margin of Western North America
and Adjacent Oceans -- Beaufort Sea to Baja California: Houston, Texas, Circum-Pacific Council for Energy and Mineral Resources,
Earth Science Series, v. 6., p. 353-401. National Park Service, 2012, Shipwrecks at Point Reyes, accessed May 1, 2013 at:
http://www.nps.gov/pore/historyculture/upload/map_shipwrecks.pdf
Citation
- Title Geology and geomorphology--Offshore of Tomales Point Map Area, California.
-
- creation Date
2018-06-08T08:20:47.565765
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- URL: https://pubs.usgs.gov/ds/781/
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Linkage for online resource
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2018-08-07T00:30:12Z
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- notes: This metadata record was generated by an xslt transformation from a dc metadata record; Transform by Stephen M. Richard, based
on a transform by Damian Ulbricht. Run on 2018-08-07T00:30:12Z
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