Geology of a Part of the Rosamond Hills Area, Kern County, California
Author: Roberts, William Brian
Year: 1951
Degree: Master's thesis
Advisors: Jahns, Richard H.; Noble, James A.
Committee Member: Unknown, Unknown
Option: Geology
DOI: 10.7907/MG58-VZ02
Abstract
An erosion surface of low relief was developed on the
granitic complex of the Rosamond Hills area during the
early part of the Tertiary period. Sometime during the
Miocene epoch, faulting and volcanic activity formed a
series of shallow lakes in which pyroclastic debris accumulated to a maximum depth of 900 feet to form the lower
part of the Rosamond series. Deformation and volcanic
activity culminated with the elevation of a mountain range
of considerable relief, the outpouring of a comparatively
large amount of rhyolite, and the ejection of much pyroclastic debris. A series of alluvial fans or bajada de
posits with inercalated layers of pyroclastic debris accumulated along the margin of this mountain range to a
maximum thickness of about 500 feet to form the upper part
of the Rosamond series. The area was subsequently tilted
southward, and erosion removed the Rosamond series from
the tilted block except for a narrow strip along its sou
thern margin. Hillocks formed by erosion of this strip of
Rosamond rocks constitute the Rosamond Hills. Recent
faulting along the southern margin of the Hills has probably
helped to form Rosamond Lake.
Files
- Roberts_wb_1951.pdf (application/pdf)
- Roberts_wb_1951_plate.PDF (application/pdf)