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==History== ==History==
The park was one of the first three parks established by the ] (EBRPD) in 1936. It was originally named '''Round Top Regional Park'''. ] (elevation 1,761 feet/537m) is an extinct volcano in the Berkeley Hills. It is home to several stone ]s of recent origin. The park was renamed after the second president of the EBRPD, Robert Sibley, shortly after his death. <ref name=ebrp/> The park was one of the first three parks established by the ] (EBRPD) in 1936.{{efn|The other two original parks were Tilden and Temescal.<ref name=ebrp/>}} It was originally named '''Round Top Regional Park'''. ] (elevation 1,761 feet/537m) is an extinct volcano in the Berkeley Hills. It is home to several stone ]s of recent origin. The park was renamed after the second president of the EBRPD, Robert Sibley, shortly after his death. <ref name=ebrp/>


==Geology== ==Geology==
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Folding, erosion, and a quarry operation exposed a cross section of the great volcano, providing an excellent means to study a ] volcano. Lava within the vent has been dated by ] at 9.5 million years old. <ref></ref> Folding, erosion, and a quarry operation exposed a cross section of the great volcano, providing an excellent means to study a ] volcano. Lava within the vent has been dated by ] at 9.5 million years old. <ref></ref>

==Notes==
{{notelist}}



==See also== ==See also==

Revision as of 16:04, 1 May 2017

A view from Round Top

Robert Sibley Volcanic Regional Preserve is located in the Berkeley Hills of the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area, California.

The park is in Alameda County and Contra Costa County, east of Oakland. It can be entered from Oakland on Skyline Boulevard, or from Contra Costa County on Old Tunnel Road.

History

The park was one of the first three parks established by the East Bay Regional Parks District (EBRPD) in 1936. It was originally named Round Top Regional Park. Round Top (elevation 1,761 feet/537m) is an extinct volcano in the Berkeley Hills. It is home to several stone labyrinths of recent origin. The park was renamed after the second president of the EBRPD, Robert Sibley, shortly after his death.

Geology

The preserve contains a Pliocene epoch volcanic center that, about 10 million years ago, produced most of the lavas that underlie the East Bay ridges from Inspiration Point in Tilden Regional Park to Moraga. Geologists refer to this local volcanism as the Moraga Volcanics. Subsequent compressive strains produced by various local faults including the Hayward Fault folded the lava-bearing rock formations, tilting the Round Top vent complex on its side.

Folding, erosion, and a quarry operation exposed a cross section of the great volcano, providing an excellent means to study a California Coast Ranges volcano. Lava within the vent has been dated by UC Berkeley at 9.5 million years old.

Notes

  1. The other two original parks were Tilden and Temescal.


See also

A dormant volcano at Sibley Volcanic Regional Preserve.

References

  1. ^ ebparks.org: Robert Sibley Volcanic Regional Preserve
  2. USGS.gov: "Upper Cretaceous and Lower Tertiary Rocks Berkeley and San Leandro Hills, California", by J. E. Case, GEOLOGICAL SURVEY BULLETIN 1251-J, 1968.
  3. Geology Blog: "Grizzly Peak and Moraga basalt"
  4. Geology.about.com: "California Transect - Stop 30, Orinda Formation and Moraga Volcanics"
  5. Lawrence Berkeley Lab.gov: "Berkeley Lab Geologist Studies the Ground Beneath His Feet"

External links

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