| These domes of exfoliating granitic rock are on the northeast
flank of Ryan Mountain. The domes are the remnants of Mesozoic-age molten
rock material that melted its way, or was injected into, more ancient bedrock
(the dark schist and gneiss visible on the upper-right side of the image).
When the molten rock crystallized it left behind these igneous plutons (great
bodies of granitic rock). Originally, the plutons probably formed many miles
below the surface, but uplift and erosion over millions of years have exposed
these rocks in the Little San Bernardino Mountains. Exfoliation is a weathering
and erosion process of rocks that formed under great pressure. As erosion
strips away the overburden, the rock expands and fractures form parallel
to the surface in rock masses that are of uniform texture/composition (like
a granite pluton). Weathering breaks down the rock along the fractures,
and surface erosion and mass wasting remove the overburden, creating rounded
domes -- like these shown in the image. |