GEOLOGY OF THE TIBURON PENINSULA, MARIN COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
The faulted base of the overlying um rocks is recognized throughout the peninsula by the occurrence of pervasively sheared serpentinite and/or chlorite schist which is locally replaced by silica-carbonate mineralization along sub-horizontal shear planes. It is also characterized by the presence of dense, high-grade metamorphic blocks of varying size composed of glaucophane- and lawsonite-bearing blueschist, eclogite, and/or amphibolite that have weathered out of the soft, fault-sheared matrix and remain as isolated blocks above the fault contact. These features are well exposed at Ring Mountain where the faulted base of the relatively flat-lying um sheet has been extensively exposed by erosion. Footwall rocks, composed mainly of chert or graywacke, exhibit alteration characteristics that vary with proximity to the overlying fault: chert becomes intensely folded, bleached, brecciated, and re-silicified; graywacke becomes increasingly foliated and commonly contains quartz-filled cross fractures.
The lower sedimentary and volcanic terrain exhibits a variation in metamorphic grade and deformational character throughout the peninsula. In the NW peninsula, these rocks appear relatively unaltered other than at contacts with the overlying um sheet; in the central and SE peninsula they are folded, exhibit a variable schistosity, and locally contain blueschist-facies minerals such as jadeite, glaucophane, and lawsonite.