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What are the Most Important Geologic Roadcuts in California? A Candidate in Coulterville

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In a recent post, I explored the geology of the Charlie Brown outcrop. It included excellent examples of normal faults, welded tuff, and airfall tuff, features that served as a microcosm of the geology of the entire province. I was on a field trip this weekend and saw another famous roadcut that encapsulates the geology of a different region. It was the Coulterville exposure of the Mother Lode quartz veins. It can be seen a few hundred feet west of the main junction in the village on Highway 132.
Despite extending for more than a hundred miles through the western Sierra Nevada foothills, the quartz veins of the Mother Lode are surprisingly hard to see in detail. In many places the rock has simply been removed by mining. In other instances the veins are on private property and are not accessible. But in Coulterville, the full extent of the minerals and faults of the Mother Lode are wonderfully exposed.

During the Jurassic Period, a vast subduction zone formed the margin of the western edge of the North American continent. Oceanic crust was being driven downward into the mantle, where parts of it melted to form granitic intrusions. In the Cretaceous, the focus of subduction moved west to where the Coast Ranges are today. The old subduction zone provided an avenue for mineralized solutions to rise towards the surface, where they precipitated quartz and metal deposits including gold and copper. The Melones fault was part of this system of fractures, and runs from Mariposa to Sierra City. Much of the Gold Rush gold was found in the vicinity of this fault zone. Highway 49 follows closely along the trace of the fault as well.
Mariposite at the Coulterville roadcut
The outcrop at Coulterville is the boundary between two terranes, bits of crust that were carried across the Pacific and added to the edge of the continent. The Calaveras Complex lies east of the fault, and the Foothills Terrane is found to the west. The fault zone exposes quartz veins, pyrite, and a unique mineral assemblage of quartz, ankerite, and mariposite. The ankerite is an iron-magnesium carbonate mineral similar to dolomite. The mariposite is an exceedingly rare mineral elsewhere in the world, but is found at many sites along the Melones fault. It is a chrome mica mineral formed when serpentine rock was altered by hot fluids moving up through the fault system. It was a good indicator of possible gold mineralization.
So, I'm wondering what your candidates are for the most significant geological roadcuts in California? I've reviewed the Charlie Brown outcrop, and the Big Pumice Cut that was critical to understanding the age relationships between the glacial tills and volcanic deposits in the eastern Sierra Nevada. I imagine the spectacular folded beds adjacent to the San Andreas fault along Highway 14 in Palmdale might be included. What others would you suggest?

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