1. About sixty million years ago a basin was formed beneath a
shallow ocean in the Devil's Punchbowl area. The ancient basin was bordered on
the north by a granitic body of rock which is now exposed on pinyon ridge (JP).
The southern border of the ancestral San Gabriel Mountains. This southern
portion of the basin was underlain by a rock body called the Pleasant View
Complex (Ppv). Sand and silt from the land mass to the south were deposited in
the basin forming the San Fancisquito Formation (Em). Large boulders (up to 10
feet in diameter) tumbled into the lower bed of the basin from the Pinyon Ridge
Complex. Later deposits in the San Francisquito Formation extended over the
Pinyon Ridge highland to the north. The ocean retreated and the exposed rocks
were eroded.
2. The movement
pictured on the faults occurred between forty and sixty million years ago. The
Pinion Fault "B" folded the San Francisquito Formation while fault "A" cut the
Pinyon Ridge complex as well as folding the San Francisquito Formation. These
faults are called "reverse faults" because of the direction in which the blocks
of rocks moved (arrows indicate direction). Activity on the San Andreas Fault
also occurred. The San Andreas is a right-lateral fault. One block (A) moved
away to the east in relation to the block (T) that moved to the west. The area
was further eroded.
3. The
sandstone of the Devil's Punchbowl Formation (Mp) was deposited about thirteen
million years ago. Like the San Francisquito Formation, the Punchbowl Formation
was deposited into a basin. This basin however, was not under water but was
filled by terrestrial stream deposits flowing from the north/west. Large pieces
of the San Francisquito Formation where stripped from the hills and deposited in
the lower beds of the Punchbowl Formation. This rock deposit is called
mega-breccia. Many layers of Punchbowl Formation sediments where deposited ,
some extending north over the Pinyon Ridge Formation.
4. Vertical
movement on the Punchbowl Fault raised the San Gabriel Mountain block (Ppv). It
took more than a million years to accomplish the vertical relief seen today.
Renewed movement on fault ”B” folded the Punchbowl Formation while streams
deposited older alluvium (Qoa). During this time there was also Right lateral
movement on the punchbowl fault, breaking and crushing the surrounding rock and
creating what is called the “crush zone”. The broken lines extending over the
basin depict what the Punchbowl Formation looked like before erosion.
5. Sediments
eroded from the San Gabriel Mountains were deposited in a low-lying slope (Qoa)
that extended over the Devil’s Punchbowl Area. Movement on the San Andreas fault
and deposition of older alluvium (Qoa) by streams continued.
6. Most of the
low-lying older alluvial deposits (Qoa) have been cut away from erosion, leaving
remnants of older alluvium. The nature center is located on one of these remnants.
Present streams have deposited younger alluvium on the basin floor. The Devils
Punchbowl is a fascinating display of geological forces. Continuous faulting and
erosion have been the major forces in creating the impressive structure now seen
in the Devil’s Punchbowl.