TECTONIC GEOMORPHOLOGY AND CLAST PROVENANCE OF UPLIFTED ALLUVIAL FAN GRAVELS, SAN GABRIEL MOUNTAIN FOOTHILLS, EASTERN LOS ANGELES COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Topographic profiles surveyed across a 3 km2 area of mapped paleo-fan deposits reveal apparent offsets across bounding faults. Deposit thicknesses of 5 to >30 m are constrained by mapped basement-gravel contacts and well logs. A road-cut along San Dimas Wash exposes a 31 m thick stratigraphic section comprised of semi-stratified debris flow deposits with intermittent fluvial gravel and sand horizons. This section is capped by a ~2 m thick deep-red clay-rich soil, indicative of a late Pleistocene age. Clast counts were conducted in one-meter square grids at six sites spaced at ~5 m vertical intervals. Clast lithologies consist mostly of locally derived Cretaceous and Precambrian crystalline basement rocks, with a minor component of Miocene Glendora volcanics. Quartzite and meta-sedimentary gneiss appear in the middle to upper part of the stratigraphic section. These distinctive lithologies outcrop >6 km to the east, suggesting that the older alluvium at this site may be a distal section of a dismembered paleo-alluvial fan originating from San Antonio Canyon. This interpretation is consistent with the anomalous SW slope of the fan surface toward San Dimas Wash. Hanging-wall uplift along the San Gabriel foothills may have isolated the fan remnants from source areas within the interior mountain block. Uplift and displacement of paleo-alluvial fan deposits is the result of regional transpression within the Transverse Ranges restraining bend of the San Andreas Fault Zone.