Page 10 - 1915, Springs of CA.
P. 10

10                  SPRINGS  OP  CALIFORNIA.

          San Francisco Bay,  and granite is exposed at several points.  Lime-
          stone and slate also outcrop at a few localities near the coast.
            The rocks  that make up these ranges are usually folded into  anti-
          clines  (archlike  folds)  and  synclines  (inverted  arches).  They  are
          also faulted in many places, so that their structure is complex.  The
          deposits of oil and of natural gas in these ranges and about their bor-
          ders are of great economic importance, and their occurrence is closely
          related to the structure of the rocks.
            A  few  carbonated  springs  and  some  scattered  sulphur  and  saline
          springs are found in  the unaltered sediments.  In the arid region in
          the southern part of the Temblor Range,  along the southwest side of
          San  Joaquin  Valley,  a  number  of  surface  springs  that  yield  small
          amounts  of  water  of  poor  quality  are  of  local  importance  because
          they furnish watering places for travelers and for stock.  The springs
          of chief geologic interest in this region are, however, thermal, and like
          the others they issue mainly from the unaltered sediments.
            The  representatives  of  the  Sierran  and  Coastal  systems  south  of
          the Tehachapi  are not so  clearly differentiated nor so  readily recog-
          nized  as  in  middle  California.  At  the  southern  end  of  the  San
          Joaquin Valley the Sierra swings westward as the  Tehachapi  Range,
          separating the Great Valley lowland on the northwest from the desert
          lowland  on  the  southeast.  Mount  Pinos,  the  culminating point  on
          the  divide  between  the Cuyama,  the San Joaquin, and  the  southern
          Santa  Clara  drainage  systems,  lies  at  the  center  of  a  mountain
          group  in  which  Coast  Range  and  Sierran  characteristics  are  both
          displayed.  Extending  southeastward  from  this  central  point,  the
          San  Gabriel,  San  Bernardino,  and  San  Jacinto  mountain  groups
          resemble  the  Sierra,  while  the  Santa  Monica  and  the  Santa  Ana
          mountains  are properly regarded  as  of the Coast  Range  type.  The
          Santa Ana  Mountains, however, merge southward  with  the spurs  of
          the  San  Jacinto  and  Santa  Rosa  groups,  to  form  the  Peninsula
          Range,1  which  extends  southward  through  San  Diego County  and
          forms the backbone of the peninsula of Lower California.  This range,
          although  lower  than  the  Sierra,  closely resembles it in  geologic  and
          physiographic  characteristics.
            Moderate  altitudes  are attained in these southern groups.  Mount
          Pinos is  about 9,000 feet high;  San Antonio and  San Jacinto peaks,
          the  culmmating points respectively in the  San  Gabriel  and  the  San
          Jacinto  mountains,  are  each  more  than  10,000  feet  in  elevation;
          and  San  Gorgonio,  the  highest  point  south  of  the  Sierra,  in  the
          San  Bernardino  Mountains,  is  nearly  11,500  feet  above  sea  level.
          Those of  the southern mountains which have been  described  as  be-
          longing  to  the  Sierran  type  are  composed  mainly of  granitic  and

           t Fairbanks,  H.  W.,  Geology  of  San  Diego  County:  California  State  Mineralogist  Eleventh  Kept.,
          p  76, 1893.
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