Thrust Faulting In Franciscan Rocks At Permanente, California

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Donald Towse
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
11
File Size:
1343 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1966

Abstract

The Permanente plant of Kaiser Cement & Gypsum Corporation is located at a unique thick deposit of Calera Limestone (Figure 1) on the southwest side of San Francisco Bay. Limestone is rare in the eugeosynclinal Franciscan assemblage, constituting less than 0.1 percent of the total volume. On the northwest part of the San Francisco peninsula Calera Limestone is present as isolated masses from the type sect ion near Rockaway Beach southeastward for ten miles, where the belt is truncated by the San Andreas fault. The large Permanente deposit is sixteen miles south of the truncated belt, on the northeast side of the San Andreas fault. Scattered small exposures are known for about twenty miles southeasterly from Permanente. (1,2) Most deposits of Calera are thin; the type section is about two hundred feet thick. At Permanente, however, the normal limestone section contains at least four hundred feet of limestone; and, due to folding and extensive faulting, the total vertical thickness of the limestone section is over 1400 feet. The unusual thickness of limestone is due to low angle thrust faulting. This fortuitous structure formed a deposit of limestone that supplies an 8,500,000 barrel cement plant in a major metropolitan market.
Citation

APA: Donald Towse  (1966)  Thrust Faulting In Franciscan Rocks At Permanente, California

MLA: Donald Towse Thrust Faulting In Franciscan Rocks At Permanente, California. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1966.

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