Transverse Ranges

Transverse Ranges

The Transverse Ranges get their name from the peculiar way they jog across the grain of almost all the other major mountain ranges in the state. The vast majority of the Golden State’s mountains generally run in a southeast to northwest orientation. As you might suspect, many of California’s fault lines also share this alignment.

But California’s most famous fault line, the San Andreas, bucks this trend slightly. Emerging in the Salton Trough from a spreading zone, the San Andreas at first trends northwest towards Desert Hot Springs. But not long after it takes a gentle left turn towards a more WNW bearing. Many of its subsidiary faults take a harder left and align themselves in a westerly fashion. As a result the Transverse Ranges trend in a east-west direction. This has a significant impact on the coastal plains of southern California. They are, in effect, cut off from the rest of the state by imposing mountains.

Spring Greenery
Throughout the late spring, summer, and fall, the lower elevations of the Transverse Ranges are brown or golden in color. But when the rains return in late autumn, the slopes become a brilliant green for a few months.
Santa Ynez Range
The Santa Ynez Range forms an impressive and picturesque backdrop for the beach city of Santa Barbara in the western reaches of the Transverse Ranges.
Thunderstorm
Cumulonimbus clouds begin to form over Boney Mountain indicating atmospheric instability.
The Santa Ynez River
The Santa Ynez River is the largest river in the Transverse Ranges. It rises at an elevation 4,140 ft (1,262 m) and twists for 92 miles through the mountains to the sea near Vandenberg Air Force Base. Up until the 1940s the Santa Ynez River had the largest run of steelhead south of the Bay Area. Subsequent dams have forever altered that.
Topography of Microclimates
Seen here from Griffith Park, it is not hard to comprehend how the L.A. area can be home to several microclimates. The combination of mountain ranges interspersed with basins influences precipitation patterns and restricts airflow.
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