2. The bay area and Berkeley, CA are home
to many different rock forms and wildlife
including the famous, Indian Rock Park.
The park was a gift to the City of Berkeley
from Mason-McDuffie Real Estate
Company during its development of the
Northbrae area.
1.18 acres
Features: rock outcrop with carved steps
and areas for rock climbing, Multi-
purpose turf, Picnic area, and
Vista/overlook with gorgeous view of the
San Francisco Bay
3. (Indian Rock Plaques, 2003).
• The bay region is underlain by
some of the most complex and
active geology in the world.
• Made up of everything from iron-
and magnesium-rich rocks to
sand and gravel recently
deposited by the streams and
rivers.
(GeoMap, 2014).
5. How/When Have They
Evolved and Changed Over
Time?
The earliest fossil evidence for squirrels was found in western
North America and dated to about 36 million years ago.
At about 11 million years ago, there was an explosive
diversification of genera of squirrels that inhabited the islands and
continental land masses of Southeast Asia.
There is evidence for the Asia-North America migration of certain
ground squirrel lineages, which appears to come after a
subsequent period when there were rising sea levels.
(Squirrels Family Tree, 2003).
7. How/When Have They
Evolved and Changed Over
Time?
Deer are believed to have evolved from antlerless, tusked
ancestors that resembled modern duikers and diminutive deer in
the early Eocene (Wikipedia, 2016).
Evolution took nearly 30 million years.
Large deer with impressive antlers evolved during the early
Pleistocene (Wikipedia, 2016).
9. Evolutionary History of the
California Manroot
Native to the San Francisco Bay Area.
Native American Tribes once used it to soothe aches
and pains.
Has some medicinal use.
Also referred to as the Wild Cucumber plant.
10. Metamorphic Hornfel
(SF Bay, Shields, 2016).
• Non-foliated metamorphic rocks
• Produced by contact metamorphism
• Lower grade hornfels often include porphyroblasts and inclusion-
rich phases. Mineralogy of hornfels is highly variable and varies
with the nature of the protolith, pressure and temperature, and
composition of co-magmatic fluids that may be present.
(Rock Library, 2013).
11. Igneous Rhyolite
• Many rhyolites form from granitic magma that
has partially cooled in the subsurface. When
these magmas erupt, a rock with two grain
sizes can form. The large crystals that formed
beneath the surface are called phenocrysts,
and the small crystals formed at the surface
are called groundmass (Geology, 2016).
• Rhyolite usually forms in continental or
continent-margin volcanic eruptions where
granitic magma reaches the surface. Rhyolite
is rarely produced at oceanic eruptions.
12. Sedimentary Sandstone
(Shields, 2016).
• Sandstone is a sedimentary rock
composed of sand-size grains of
mineral, rock, or organic material. It
also contains a cementing material
that binds the sand grains together
and may contain a matrix of silt- or
clay-size particles that occupy the
spaces between the sand grains.
• Sandstone is one of the most
common types of sedimentary rock
and is found in sedimentary basins
throughout the world. It is often
mined for use as a construction
material or as a raw material used in
manufacturing. In the subsurface,
sandstone often serves as an aquifer
for groundwater or as a reservoir for
oil and natural gas.
(Geology, 2013).
13. Principle of Inclusions
The principle of inclusions states
that inclusions found in other rocks
(or formations) must be older than
the rock that contain them (Sand
Atlas, 2012).
Inclusions are really made of matter
that is foreign to the rock that
contains them.
14. Disconformity
An erosion surface
between two packages
of sediment.
The lower package of
sediments was not tilted
prior to deposition of the
upper sediment
package.
(Shields, 2016).
15. References
Retrieved from http://www.sandatlas.org/principle-of-inclusions/
Retrieved from http://berkeleyplaques.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/IndianRock_03.jpg
Retrieved from http://www.knightsinnberkeley.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/Indian-Rock-
Park.jpg
Retrieved from http://geomaps.wr.usgs.gov/sfbay/geomap.html
Deer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. (n.d.). Retrieved June 12, 2016, from https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Deer#Evolution
Rhyolite: An extrusive igneous rock. Photos and definition. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://geology.com/
rocks/rhyolite.shtml
Rock Library | Imperial College London. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://wwwf.imperial.ac.uk/
earthscienceandengineering/rocklibrary/viewglossrecord.php?Term=hornfels
Squirrels' Evolutionary Family Tree Reveals Influence of Climate, Geology | Duke Today. (n.d.). Retrieved
from https://today.duke.edu/2003/02/squirreltree0302.html