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What Can You See From the Devil’s Chair? EarthCache

Hidden : 4/1/2008
Difficulty:
2 out of 5
Terrain:
3 out of 5

Size: Size:   not chosen (not chosen)

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Geocache Description:

Take a seat in the Devil’s Chair and enjoy the view of the Punchbowl Fault and the Devil’s Punchbowl.

After finding the Devil’ Punchbowl hike out to the Devil’s Chair along the well-marked and maintained trail. The trail is longer than what the GPS says since it winds in and out of the canyons on the foothill on the way to the Chair and actually goes past the Chair and backtracks to it. The last few tens of yards are on a narrow ridge enclosed in chain-link fence. Go prepared with enough water.

Once at the Devil’s Chair, go ahead and take a seat if you dare. You will get a view of the Punchbowl fault that is not visible from the park headquarters. A fault is the surface along which rocks have moved relative to each other. Some of the easiest examples faults to identify in the field are where two different colors of rock are right next to each other.

From the Devil’s chair the Punchbowl fault is most easily recognized in the cliffs to the northwest. Light tan to pink rock is on the right and a mottled white and black rock is on the left. The tan to pink rock is the sedimentary Punchbowl Formation (link to Earthcache waiting for approval) and the white and black rock is metamorphic and igneous rocks of the San Gabriel Mountains (link to Earthcache to be developed). The fault itself looks like a relatively dark line coming down the hillside.

That dark line is the surface along which the rocks slid past each other. The rocks near that line are pulverized. You can see a close-up of that surface at The Punchbowl Fault - View a Plate Boundary. As you go further from the fault, the rocks on either side of the fault are less and less broken up. When you go far enough away from the fault, the rocks don't look broken up at all. However, that does not mean that the rocks have been unaffected by the movement along the fault. Movement along the fault has created the Devil's Punchbowl itself. The Punchbowl is formed by the layers of rock in the Punchbowl Formation that have been bent into a plunging syncline forming a bowl shape. There is actually an anticline and syncline between the fault and the prominent Punchbowl, but they are smaller and difficult to see from this vantage point.

As the rocks on either side of the fault moved passed each other a great deal of pressure was exerted on the rocks, not only where the touched, but a long distance away. This pressure resulted in the bending and folding of the layered sedimentary rock since the individual grains and layers could slip by each other. However on the other side of the fault, the igneous and metamorphic (crystalline) rock stayed relatively the same since the crystals in this kind of rock are interlocking and don’t slip past each other easily.

Logging requirements:
Send me a note with :

  1. The text "GC1ATCH What Can You See From the Devil’s Chair?" on the first line
  2. The number of people in your group.
  3. Looking at the rock that makes up the Devil’s Chair, which side of the fault are you on, the sedimentary or crystalline side?
  4. Based on the character of the rock, how far from the fault are you?.
  5. How comfortable do you think the Devil is in his chair?

The above information was compiled from the following sources:

  • Chester, Fredrick M. 1999, Field Guide to the Punchbowl Fault Zone at Devils Punchbowl Los Angels County Park, California, V. 2.1, January 1999 Center for Tectonophysics, Dept. of Geology and Geophysics, Texas A& M University, College Station, TX
  • Dibblee, T.W Jr., Geology of the Devil’s Punchbowl, Los Angeles County, California, Geological Society of America Centennial Field Guide—Cordilleran Section, 1987

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