Showing posts with label enclave. Show all posts
Showing posts with label enclave. Show all posts

Monday, April 14, 2014

The Yosemite No One Sees in Summer...the Merced River Canyon

The drought in California is horrific. It is quite probably the worst drought in centuries, but we received a slight respite in the form of showers and snow during the last part of March and early April. It was a drop in the bucket towards relieving the huge water deficit that has built up in the last few years, but it gave a shot of energy to the seedlings of grasses and wildflowers. They perhaps should have sprouted and grown months ago, and they will be dried out in a few short weeks, but this week, the Sierra Nevada foothills were alive with color.
We were on our way to Yosemite Valley for our geology field studies course last Saturday, and I joked (only in half-jest) that the students had to "earn" the right to learn the geology of Yosemite Valley by first exploring the canyon of the Merced River. We had to prepare ourselves by undertaking a journey through the rocks that predate the granitic rocks that form the walls of the iconic valley. Our route took us through the foothill towns of Snelling and Hornitos, and then we drove up Highway 140 through Mariposa, over Midpines Summit and down into the deep gorge of the Merced River (originally the "Rio de Nuestra SeƱora de la Merced (River of Our Lady of Mercy)".
Highway 140 winds back and forth through a series of metamorphic terranes, bands of deformed and twisted rocks that traveled across the Pacific Ocean to be mashed into the western edge of the North American Continent. The rocks include slate, schist, marble, phyllite, quartzite and greenstone. These were the ancient rocks (between 600 and 200 million years old) that were intruded by the granitic rocks that eventually were exposed and eroded to form the dramatic cliffs of Yosemite Valley.

The Sierra Nevada is a huge westward tilted block. The slope has allowed the rivers draining the mountain range to carve deep gorges, some deeper than the Grand Canyon (Kings Canyon to the south is about 8,000 feet deep!). The depth of the Merced is more like 2,000 to 3,000 feet deep downstream of Yosemite, and in any other setting in most any other state, this would be enough for the establishment of national parks and the like. Instead, it is "just" the preliminary canyon one must pass through before arriving at Yosemite.

The carving of such deep canyons can have serious geologic consequences for society. The slopes of such canyons are inherently unstable, and mass wasting (landsliding) is a constant hazard. The building of roads and railways adds to the instability by undercutting the already steep slopes. Such is the case with Highway 140. CalTrans has struggled for years to prevent the collapse of a slope near the village of El Portal. In 2006, the slope flicked away the mitigation efforts and collapsed onto 600 feet of highway. The Ferguson Slide, as it is called, closed the highway for months and caused economic hardship for the surrounding communities. Two temporary bridges were constructed to cross the river and circumvent the huge slump. Decisions have yet to be reached regarding the permanent disposition of the highway.
The Ferguson Slide. 600 feet of Highway 140 is buried under the rocks.

As we drove deeper into the Merced River Canyon, the slopes seemed to come alive in orange and gold. The California Poppies have reached the zenith of their blooming cycle. In contrast to my previous gloom and doom post regarding fires, rejuvenation does indeed occur, as many of these slopes have been cleared of brush and chaparral by repeated wildfires, allowing for dense concentrations of wildflowers.

We passed El Portal, and then the Yosemite View Lodge. The name is not totally dishonest; the boundary of the national park does indeed lie a few yards east of the hotel complex, so the view of the granite slope beyond is indeed a view of Yosemite. But it is not yet the iconic valley with Half Dome and El Capitan and Yosemite Falls. It is pretty, though, and the Merced River makes a dramatic dash through the maze of gigantic fallen boulders.
 We arrived at the park entrance station, drove a few more miles, and made our last stop before Yosemite Valley. It was another site of mass wasting, but this time it was a rockfall, and it included granitic rock instead of metamorphic material. The so-called Cookie Slide took place in 1982, and involved around 100,000 cubic yards of material that bounced and fell down the slope onto Highway 140. Once again, the road was blocked for weeks.
 The size of some of the fallen blocks is astonishing. It's hard to see how a block like the one in the picture below held together during the downhill descent.
The rocks are part of an intrusive series called the El Capitan granite, which was intruded about 103 million years ago. A contemporaneous intrusion of dioritic rock lead to some co-mingling of magmas, including the enclave of darker rock in the granite (below).
I've always thought of granite as a particularly beautiful rock. The sparkling mass of quartz (glassy gray color), orthoclase feldspar (white grains), and biotite mica is pleasing to the eye, and tells an odd story: Yellowstone National Park, off in Wyoming, sits on top of a huge magma chamber that may one day explode again (but not tomorrow). In Yosemite, we are sitting within a former magma chamber, under the volcano. As such we are exploring the inner depths of an extensive magma system, brought to light by long periods of uplift and erosion.

In a coming post, we'll see how Yosemite looked on Saturday.

Friday, April 11, 2008

Touring the Underside of the Volcanoes, Part 2


Yosemite Valley and Yosemite National Park contain incredible exposures of the magma chambers that once fed eruptions of volcanoes that topped the Ancestral Sierra Nevada, the mountain edifice that graced the Cretaceous landscape of California and western Nevada (now, when is the last time you heard Yosemite introduced that way?).

As a glacially carved valley (ignoring for the moment the work of rivers and mass wasting), Yosemite doesn't really fit the stereotype of a U-shaped valley. It has a very flat valley floor, and instead of a relatively linear valley, it has many reentrants and coves. This in large part is responsible for the unique scenery of this beautiful place. The flat floor exists because lake sediments filled the trough in the area upstream of some of the valley moraines. The walls vary, because more than one kind of granitic rock is present, and in fact at least eleven intrusions are defined in the area (see the map at http://virtual.yosemite.cc.ca.us/ghayes/geology.htm).

Ironically, the rocks are not all that easily observed up close. The cliff base is often covered with loose and unstable talus, and many of the accessible exposures are covered with lichens. Hetch Hetchy Valley is often a better bet, having been more recently scoured by glacial ice (see my very first picture post: Photo of the Day).

A slide in 1982 brought down huge boulders of the El Capitan granite, one of which is pictured above. The photo shows a large number of darker colored enclaves*, blobs of dark rock that probably originated as two different intruding magmas mixed. The enclaves can perhaps be thought of as globules of oil floating in the vinegar of Italian salad dressing.
*Enclave: Body of external origin in an igneous rock. The main varieties are xenoliths (fragments of solid rocks) and microgranitoid enclaves (former magma globules derived by mingling of magmas).
Vernon, R.H., 2004, A Practical Guide to Rock Microstructure, Cambridge University Press