The San Andreas
Fault : What it is, Where to Find it and How to See it.
David K. Lynch
David
K. Lynch, PhD, is an astronomer and planetary scientist
living in Topanga, California. When not hanging around the
San Andreas fault or using the large telescopes on Hawaii's
Mauna Kea, he plays fiddle, collects rattlesnakes, gives public
lectures on rainbows and writes essays and books, including
the remarkable Color and Light in Nature (Cambridge University
Press). Dr. Lynch's latest book is the Field
Guide to the San Andreas Fault. The book contains twelve
one-day driving trips along different parts of the fault and
includes mile-by-mile road logs and GPS coordinates for hundreds
of fault features. As it happens, Dave's house was destroyed
in 1994 by the magnitude 6.7 Northridge earthquake.
The San Andreas Fault is the sliding boundary
between the Pacific Plate and the North American Plate. It
slices California in two from Cape Mendocino to the Mexican
border.
San Diego, Los Angeles and Big Sur are on
the Pacific Plate. San Francisco, Sacramento and the Sierra
Nevada are on the North American Plate. And despite San Francisco
's legendary 1906 earthquake, the San Andreas Fault does not
go through the city. But communities like Desert Hot Springs,
San Bernardino, Wrightwood, Palmdale, Gorman, Frazier Park,
Daly City, Point Reyes Station and Bodega Bay lie squarely
on the fault and are sitting ducks.

Figure 1. David K. Lynch is author of Field
Guide to the San Andreas Fault.
The San Andreas Fault is a transform fault. Imagine placing
two slices of pizza on the table and sliding them past one
another where they touch along a common straight edge. Bits
of pepperoni from one side crumble across the boundary onto
the anchovy side. The same thing happens with the fault, and
the geology and landforms along the mighty rift are extremely
complicated.
The Pacific Plate is moving northwesterly
relative to the North American Plate at a speed of a couple
of inches per year - about the same rate that your fingernails
grow. But this is not a steady motion, it is the average motion.
For years the plates will be locked with no movement at all
as they push against one another. Suddenly the built-up strain
breaks the rock along the fault and the plates slip a few
feet all at once. The breaking rock sends out waves in all
directions, and it is the waves that we feel as earthquakes.
In many places like the Carrizo Plain (San
Luis Obispo County) and the Olema Trough (Marin County), the
fault is easy to see as a series of scarps and pressure ridges.
In other places, it is more subtle, because the fault hasn't
moved in many years and is covered with alluvium or overgrown
with brush. In San Bernardino and Los Angeles Counties, many
of the roads along the fault cut through great mountains of
gouge, the powdery, crumbled rock that has been pulverized
by the moving plates.

Figure 2. The San Andreas Fault slices across
most of California. Copyright © 2006 David K. Lynch.
The hallmark of the San Andreas Fault is the different
rocks on either side of it. Being about 28 million years old,
rock from great distances have been juxtaposed against rocks
from very different locations and origins. The Salinian bock
of granite in central and northern California originated in
Southern California, and some even say northern Mexico. Pinnacles
National Monument in Monterey County is only half of a volcanic
complex, the other part being 200 miles southeast in Los Angeles
County and known as the Neenach Volcanics.
There are many myths and legends about the
San Andreas Fault, the biggest being that it will one day
crack and California will slide into the sea. WRONG! It won't
happen and it can't happen. Nor is there any thing
such as “earthquake weather” or preferred times of day when
earthquakes hit.
The San Andreas Fault is more accessible
than any other major fault in the world. With California's
large population and temperate climate, there are many roads
that snake along the fault. They are uncrowded and peaceful,
perfect for family outings. There is abundant camping, bird
watching, wild flowers and wildlife, rock collecting and natural
beauty along the way. State and National parks are strung
along the fault like beads on a string. All it takes is a
good map, a comfortable car and a desire to see the world's
most famous fault.
Copyright © 2006 David K. Lynch. All rights reserved.
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