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Frequently Asked Questions
Is Mt. Diablo a
volcano? No. Although basaltic lava rock can be found on the mountain, the
lava was formed far at sea, upwelling from deep in the earth through fissures in the ocean
crust. How high is the
mountain? 3,849 feet. The summit is actually inside the museum. What kind of rock makes
up the summit? The hard resistant rock on the summit is mostly greenstone (a
slightly altered form of basalt, a common igneous rock that makes up much of the upper
part of the ocean crust) and hard reddish chert with minor amounts of graywacke sandstone
and shale. The exposed rock that you can stand on inside the summit museum is
greenstone. Why does it stand up
higher than the surrounding area? The rocks have been folded and lifted by compressional stresses in
the earths crust. The greenstone and chert on the two main peaks are very resistant
to erosion compared to many of the rocks in the surrounding areas and thus stand
higher. Is Mt. Diablo still
rising? The stresses that folded and raised the mountain are still at work
and the mountain continues to slowly rise (about 0.1 inch a year) while the forces of
weathering and erosion try to keep pace. How old is the
mountain? The oldest rocks on the mountain are the greenstones in the mountains
core formed about 190 million years old. But as a topographic feature, the mountain is
relatively young, forming only during the past one million years or so. Is there any gold or
silver here? Minor amounts of gold and silver associated with small copper
deposits on the north side of the mountain were prospected, but production was not
economical. Are the mercury mines
still in operation? No. Mining operations stopped in the early 1970s after approximately
$1,500,000 worth of mercury had been extracted. What are they quarrying
on the north side? Diabase. Diabase is a dark igneous rock of fine crystalline texture.
It is used primarily for building stones and crushed rock for roadbeds. Are there dinosaur
bones in any of the rocks? Did they live here? No to both. The Mt. Diablo region was under the ocean during the
Jurassic and Cretaceous. The closest dinosaur bones to us were found near Pacheco Pass in
central California. What about the bones at
the Blackhawk Quarry? The quarry on the south side of the mountain is one of the richest
mammal bone beds in the United States, second only to La Brea in Los Angeles. Bones from 9
million-year-old horses, camels, rhinos, and mastodons have been found herebut these
are much younger than dinosaurs, which died out over 60 million years ago. The bones (only
fragments are found, no complete skeletons) were preserved in stream deposits. How old are the fossils
in the building blocks of the Summit Building? The clams, oysters, and other fossil shells in the building stones of
the summit building came from the Briones Formation of Miocene age near Fossil
Ridge and are about 12 million years old. How are the caves
formed at Rock City? Although often called Wind Caves, they are only indirectly due to the
wind. During the rainy season, water seeps into the rocks. The water is a very weak acid
and slowly dissolves the cement that had been holding the sand grains together. The hot
dry days of summer would draw the water to the surface of the rock where it evaporated and
left behind the cement it had dissolved from deeper in the rock. After centuries of wet
winters and dry summers, the inside of the rock had only a little cement, while the
outside had a hard crust of sand grains tightly cemented. As wind and rain continued to
beat on the faces of the rocks, holes developed in the crust. This exposed the loosely
cemented grains underneath, which erode much faster than the surface, so that holes
enlarged into little caves behind the hard crust. Very little of the hard crust remains on
the surface of these rocks today. This text was reproduced from "Geology of Mt. Diablo - A Training Manual" by Roi Peers |
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MOUNT DIABLO INTERPRETIVE
ASSOCIATION
P.O. Box 346 - Walnut Creek, CA 94597-0346
(925) 927-7222 / FAX: (877) 349-5016