[VIDEO] Creativity and Bay Area Innovation, Part IV: The Grinding Geology

Apr 21, 2018 | design + innovation

Since creativity and destruction are two sides of the same coin (in order to create anything, something must be destroyed, morphed, or transformed), those who get to feel the occasional shrugs of the earth, as Bay Area inhabitants bear witness, also gain valued, experiential insight into the dynamic, interdependent, creative universe in which we inhabit.

Why explore the grinding geology?

In my last post on Creativity and Bay Area Innovation, I explored the effects of the weather on the Bay Area’s inhabitants to create like no other region.

Now I’d like to explore the Earth underneath, seeing how the peculiar geology of the Bay Area contributes to creativity and innovation.

For this section, keep in mind the importance of recognizing both the dynamic nature of the creative universe as well as its interdependence. In a region prone to earthquakes, and those earthquakes the results of forces playing themselves out on a global scale, there is a felt sense of the dynamism and interdependence happening simply by living in a region prone to seismic activity.

Geology’s Grand Unification Theory: Plate Tectonics

As one of the most interesting and comprehensive discoveries science has yet to produce, the theory of plate tectonics reveals that the Earth we inhabit, while spanning almost 200 million square miles of surface area, is intimately connected.

Much of the landscape we see in the Bay Area can be understood in the context of geology’s own grand unification theory: plate tectonics. As one of the most interesting and comprehensive discoveries science has yet to produce, the theory of plate tectonics reveals that the Earth we inhabit, while spanning almost 200 million square miles of surface area, is intimately connected. Magma welling up in the center of the Atlantic, and tremblors in Chile and Japan, for example, all contribute to the seismic events in California.

While all parts of the geologic Earth—core, mantel, crust—and by extension, the oceans and atmosphere, are engaged in an unending dance of build-up and release, it is really only the inhabitants of transition points—fault lines, subduction zones, volcanoes, hot spots, spreading centers—who know this in their bones. On this front, inhabitants of the Bay Area have much more to fraternize about with persons from Christchurch, New Zealand, (fault line), Jakarta, Indonesia (Subduction zone), Naples, Italy (Volcanoes) and Rekiveck, Iceland (you name it) than they do with their fellow Americans residing in Omaha, Chicago, or Washington DC.

Rockstar geology

In terms of geology, the Bay Area lies just to the east, but well inside the frayed boundary separating two tectonic behemoths. To the west, the Pacific plate forms a sizable chunk of the Earth’s crust, underlying the bulk of its largest ocean. To the east, the North American Plate stretches from western California to Iceland and the Mid Atlantic rift—some 6000 miles away. North to south, the North American plate spans from Central America to the northern edge of Canada, Greenland, and parts of Siberia. In California, the boundary between these two plates is a 750 mile fracture line starting at the parched, meth- head landscape of the Salton Sea east of San Diego running through Southern, Central, and Northern California and terminating at Punta Gorda in the lush coastal forests of Mendocino County.

This knife edge fault (on a geologic scale) enters the Bay Area south of San Jose, where it splits like a tuning fork into two parallel fault systems. These two fault systems bracket the San Francisco estuary and the bulk of its shoreline. Known for its consistent edginess and occasional binge behavior, the principle fault—the San Andreas—is a geological rockstar (the Keith Richards of geology) of global significance. At around 2 centimeters of displacement per year, it flies by geological standards, making it one of the fastest moving faults in the world. As such, seismologists the world over monitor this fault with the enthusiasm that Dead Heads pour over their bootlegs.

A shard of earth wedged between two giants

The San Andreas Fault follows the South Coastal Mountains of the San Francisco peninsula, enters the Pacific at Mussels Rock Park in Daly City, re-enters the land at the Bolinas Lagoon, then re-enters the Pacific once again at the razor straight Tomales Bay. To the east, its principle offshoots, first the Calaveras fault, then Hayward, run along the foothills of the East Bay, through the cities of San Jose, Fremont, Hayward, San Leandro, Oakland, Berkeley, El Cerrito, and Richmond before entering the San Pablo Bay and continuing on into Sonoma County. Between these two prongs, lies the Bay Area, along with the most densely populated areas of the Bay Area.

Between these two prongs, the music of the earth rings out as barely audible whispers, animated melodies, and the occasional raging cataclysmic cacophony. Since creativity and destruction are two sides of the same coin (in order to create anything, something must be destroyed, morphed, or transformed), those who get to feel the occasional shrugs of the earth, as Bay Area inhabitants bear witness, also gain valued, experiential insight into the dynamic, interdependent, creative universe in which we inhabit.

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About the “Creativity and Bay Area Innovation” series

The Bay Area is hands down the single most creative and innovative region in the United States, receiving a whopping 32 percent of all the venture capital invested in the United States.

The Bay Area is hands down the single most creative and innovative region in the United States.

Home to such major players as Apple, Google, Facebook, Twitter, You Tube, Oracle, and numerous others, the Bay Area receives a whopping 32 percent of all the venture capital invested in the United States, according to the Bay Area Regional Center. It also has the second highest concentration of Fortune 500 companies next to New York.

All the money aside, the Bay Area has either begun or fostered the growth of such influential cultural movements as The Counter Culture Movement, Free Speech, Gay Rights, California Cuisine and the Local Foods Movement, the Internet, municipal recycling programs, Beat poetry and literature, psychedelic experimentation, and music festivals, such as Burning Man.

In this series, I will explore various ways of understanding the proliferation of creativity and innovation of the Bay Area, including Feng Shui, geology, culture, urban design, and history, hoping to shed a bit of light on a place I love so very much, hoping to honor some of the ways it has shaped my own creativity throughout my adult life.

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