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| Fort Ross Natural History | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Fort Ross Natural History The bluff on which the fort stands is a young coastal marine terrace. Below are rugged sandstone and conglomerate rocks and cliffs, a sandy beach and offshore islets. Two small harbors give entrance. Behind the fort, a backdrop of grassy hills rises quickly as a steep wooded slope, covered first with Bishop pines, broad-leafed trees and shrubs, then with giant evergreens and tan bark oak trees. The first ridge of the Coast Range, also a marine terrace, reaches a height of 1,600 feet and parallels the sea. The park contains about 3,200 acres of spectacular wildlands. More information on the Natural Environment The San Andreas FaultCalifornia’s major earthquake rift zone, passes through San Francisco and comes ashore two miles south of Fort Ross, then runs north and through the orchard. The fault is the result of the boundaries of the Pacific and North American plates passing by each other. On this portion of the fault the movement tends to be in sudden large events, and it is thought that this section of the San Andreas Fault moves significantly only every few hundred years. California’s 1906 earthquake was the sudden result of such motion. The fort itself lies on marine sediments to the seaward side of the fault. These sediments were deposited underwater on the Pacific plate forty to sixty million years ago, and have moved from the south about three hundred miles up the California coast. In 1906 the land at Fort Ross shifted 12.6 feet along a narrow well-defined area above the plate movement. The resulting surface features can still be seen today. Offset creeks, sag ponds (depressions along the fault which often become filled with water in winter), escarpments, shifted fences, and damaged trees are lasting evidence of the quake. Earthquake at Fort Ross April 18, 1906
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These photos were taken after the 1906 Earthquake in the vicinity of the Doda Ranch, near Mill Creek just south of Fort Ross. The surface rupture and the offset fence resulting from the earthquake are pictured. (Bancroft Library)
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Repair of the earthquake damage to the Russian chapel began in 1916. The Russian officials quarters, later used as the Fort Ross Saloon, was torn down and the salvaged lumber was used to rebuild the chapel.
San Andreas Fault Zone
The San Andreas Fault, California's
major earthquake rift zone, passes through San Francisco and comes
ashore two miles south of Fort Ross, then continues north through the
Russian orchard. It parallels the coast and re-enters the Pacific Ocean
at Alder Creek near Manchester. The fault is the result of the boundaries
of the Pacific and North American plates passing by each other. At
this spot just south of Fort Ross the fault comes on shore. This portion
of the fault is considered to be locked, and therefore the movement
tends to be in sudden large events. It is thought that this section
of the San Andreas Fault moves significantly only every few hundred
years. California's 1906 earthquake was the result of such sudden motion.

The fort lies on marine sediments to the seaward side of the fault. These sediments were deposited underwater on the Pacific plate forty to sixty million years ago, and have moved from the south about three hundred miles up the California coast. In 1906 the land at Fort Ross shifted 12.6 feet along a narrow well-defined area above the plate movement. The resulting surface features can still be seen today. Offset fences and creeks, sag ponds (depressions along the fault which often become filled with water in winter), escarpments, and damaged trees are lasting evidence of the quake.

San Andreas Fault traverses the length of the Fort Ross orchard in an approximate north-south direction. The orchard is situated east of Highway One 1/4 mile up Fort Ross Road. The dramatic effects of the earthquake are still visible in the orchard. Among the fruit trees there are redwoods damaged in 1906. Escarpments, or pressure ridges, such as this one in the orchard form when two tectonic plates collide. Between trail markers 7 and 8 there is a sag pond.
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| Earthquake damage in the Russian orchard, 1906. | G. W. Call standing by a damaged redwood, 1906. | Emma Call by the "Earthquake Tree" 1906. |

Across the road from the orchard on the trail beginning at the Stanley Spyra Memorial Grove there are many more visible remnants of the 1906 earthquake such as damaged giant redwoods, escarpments, and sag ponds. Redwoods damaged in 1906 continued to grow in a deformed manner. Trunks were split and the top branches snapped off. Sag ponds across from the orchard, 1906. (Bancroft Library) The sag ponds are still apparent in 2006.
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Geologists from the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) continue to investigate the North Coast segment of the fault line at Fort Ross. Studies conducted in the Fort Ross Orchard, the former Doda Ranch, and other locations are aimed at determining methods to accurately forecast earthquakes.
Orchard Information
Sandy Cove
A Hike at Fort Ross
Plants, Animals
& More Information on the Natural Environment PDF