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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
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Surface and subsurface data determine the San Gabriel fault
geometry and history of faulting in the Honor Rancho area. The northwest-trending, east-dipping San Gabriel
fault
consists of two strands: an older, concave-upward strand, which becomes low angle at depth, and a younger, high-angle, planar strand. The two strands merge to form one high-angle
fault
southeast of the Wayside Honor Rancho oil field. West of the San Gabriel
fault
zone the Modelo Formation (lower and upper Mohnian) overlies granitic basement. West of the
fault
, the Modelo and Towsley (Delmontian) Formations are in
fault
contact with the Castaic Formation present only east of the older San Gabriel
fault
strand. The marine Castaic Formation (lower and upper Mohnian) unconformably overlies the nonmarine M
nt Canyon Formation of middle to late Miocene age. The Pico Formation (Pliocene) unconformably overlies older strata on both sides of the
fault
. Despite lithologic similarities of the Pico on both sides of the
fault
, markers within the formation cannot be correlated across the
fault
. The Saugus Formation (Pleistocene) unconformably overlies the Pico Formation and correlates well across and within the
fault
zone. Ease of correlation suggests that most of the right slip along the San Gabriel
fault
occurred prior to late Pliocene time. There appears to have been no lateral offset during Pleistocene and Holocene times, but primarily vertical displacement has occurred since the deposition of the Saugus Formation. However, seismic studies infer that right-slip activity is still present at dept
along the San Gabriel
fault
.
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