Rainbow Falls (California)

Rainbow Falls
Location Madera County, California, United States
Coordinates 37°36′06″N 119°05′00″W / 37.60167°N 119.08333°W / 37.60167; -119.08333Coordinates: 37°36′06″N 119°05′00″W / 37.60167°N 119.08333°W / 37.60167; -119.08333
Elevation 7,415 feet (2,260 m)
Total height 101 feet (31 m)
Number of drops 1
Watercourse San Joaquin River

Rainbow Falls is the highest waterfall on the Middle Fork of the San Joaquin River, California, United States. Plunging 101-feet down to the turbulent water below, the falls are named for the rainbows that appear in its mist throughout sunny summer days.[1]

About 75,000 years ago, lava erupted from a vent just east of the present-day Falls. The eruption occurred in two stages. The first pulse of lava flowed about 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) westward and pooled in the Middle Fork of the San Joaquin drainage. The second pulse of lava insulated the first, allowing it to cool slowly and to fracture vertically. The layer above cooled under different conditions and fractured horizontally. Geologists describe these rocks as platy rhyodacite and are visible in the cliffs that surround Rainbow Falls.[2]

As water rushes over the cliff, it erodes the vertically fractured rhyodacite more easily. A small cavern begins to form at the base of the Falls, and the overlying rock loses its support and collapses. This process, known as undercutting, causes the waterfall to recede slowly upstream. To date Rainbow Falls has retreated about 500 feet (150 m) due to undercutting.[2]

References

  1. "Nearby attractions". Devils Postpile. U.S. National Park Service.
  2. 1 2 "Rainbow Falls". Nature and Science: Devils Postpile. National Park Service.
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