on the right and
Silverwood Lake near the boundary. The
San Andreas Fault runs straight up the middle toward the horizon.
Tectonics The Transverse Ranges result from a complex of tectonic forces and
faulting stemming from the interaction of the
Pacific Plate and the
North American Plate along the dextral (right slip)
San Andreas Fault system. Their orientation along an east–west axis as opposed to the general northwest–southeast trend of most California ranges results from a pronounced left step in the San Andreas Fault that occurred in the
Pliocene ( million years ago) when southern reaches of the fault moved east to open the
Gulf of California. The crust within the Pacific Plate south of the ranges can not easily make the left turn westward as the entire plate moves northwestward, forcing pieces of the crust to compress and lift. Prior to this shift of the fault to create the left bend, northwest–southeast trending rock belts in all of the Transverse Ranges began to rotate clockwise in the right shear of Pacific Plate – North American Plate motion. This tectonic rotation began in Early Miocene Time and continues today. The total rotation is about 90° in the Western Transverse Ranges and less (about 40°) in the eastern ranges.
Catalina Island shows the most rotation: almost 120°.
Rocks Rocks of the Transverse Ranges exhibit extreme differences in geologic age and composition, varying from sedimentary rocks in the western Santa Ynez and volcanic rocks in the Santa Monica Mountains to primarily granitic and metamorphic rock in the central and eastern segments, including the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains. The oldest basement (deepest) rocks are of
Proterozoic age, and are found in the San Gabriel Mountains and the San Bernardino Mountains. The
Jurassic-
Cretaceous Franciscan Assemblage is found in the western section of the ranges and is the presumed basement in this segment. Exposed plutonic rocks from the
Mesozoic, mostly granites, can be found on
Mount Pinos and generally in regions east of
Tejon Pass. The youngest rocks are
Cenozoic sedimentary and volcanic rocks that can be found throughout the ranges. The western segment is distinctive for the large thickness of Cretaceous and Cenozoic sedimentary rocks, estimated to be up to 10 kilometers. These faults are part of the same thrust fault system south of the northern Channel Islands of San Miguel, Santa Rosa, and Anacapa Islands. ==Ecology==