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Facts About Sulfites
*
Even organic wines contain sulfites.
* Sweet white wines have the highest
amounts .
* Dry white wines are second; red wines have the lowest sulfite levels.
*
Dried fruits and lunchmeats have far more sulfites than red wine.
* Your body produces enough sulfites in
24 hours to require 100 bottles of wine to be labeled,
“Contains sulfites”.
So, if
red wine gives you a headache,
chances are that sulfites are not the cause.
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Gray
Whale Migration
Information Sheet
"Pacific Star Winery:
Location to a Fault"
~ Ukiah Daily Journal
"CORO Mendocino"
~ Ukiah Daily Journal
"Championing Charbono"
~ Wine News
"Mendocino’s Chorus Wants the World to Know the Score"
~ San Francisco Chronicle
"Wine, Woman & Song"
~ Coastal Living
"Vintage View"
~ Savor Wine Country
"Queen of Charbono "
~ LA Times
"Wave Maker "
~ Wine Country Living
"Geologist Discover Local Fault Lines
Connect to
San Andreas Fault System"
~ Ft Bragg Advocate
"Fort Bragg
Quake Danger Found"
~ Press Democrat
"New Fault Lines Found
Along San Andreas"
~ San Francisco Chronicle
"Everybody Needs a Bit of Sun, Sand and Sea"
~ Sea Breeze
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$14 bottle...
multi-vintage blend of Mendocino county's best Syrah,
Charbono and Carignane, commemorating the 2006 discovery of
the Pacific Star Fault, named for, and running directly
under the wine cellar.
The Fault

The geologists gave the honor to us to name the
fault and we chose the
Pacific Star
Fault!
The San Andreas Fault is a rupture on the surface of
the earth that marks a separation of two continental plates;
the North American and the Pacific. This rupture is at least
65 million years old, the time when North America separated
from Europe creating the Atlantic Ocean.
The North American Plate is moving about a
half-inch per year to the west, while the Pacific Plate is moving about
the same speed but to the northwest, towards Japan and the Aleutian
Islands. That means the Pacific Plate’s speed to the west is one-half
that of the North American Plate. Because of this the North American
Plate is overriding the Pacific Plate, thus creating the San Andreas
Fault.
The San Andreas is not a single rupture but
many, and the zone is many miles deep. Where that movement shows on the
surface we call a fault, and the movement below can show on the surface
at more than one place. The San Andreas is therefore a multi-fault
system. In Northern California it is comprised of the main San Andreas,
the Hayward, the Calaveras and several other faults, the Napa and the
Pacific Star among them. One cannot track a fault from the surface
unless you have visual evidence showing on the surface of the planet.
Because Northern California is heavily forested and has inland bodies of
water, faults are not readily visible until they have a recent break.
Over time because of erosion, those breaks will be covered by water or
vegetation, or even new sediment, again covering evidence of a fault. It
is possible that the Pacific Star and Napa Faults are the northern
section of the Hayward Fault, as the Hayward Fault disappears under San
Pablo Bay and the Napa into forest.
The surface rocks at the winery on which one
stands today are 130,000 years old, very young by geologic standards.
There is a huge gap in time between that top 6 feet or so and the dark,
hard rocks beneath them: about 65 million years!
The young rocks are part of a recent wave terrace from an
earlier, higher sea level when there was less ice at the polar caps than
today. What rocks that used to be between them have been eroded away by
wave action over millennia. The fault has been moving many millions of
years, most of the time covered over by the ocean or newer sediments,
like that young sandstone or soil. Where the geologists were able to see
the fault was a break between sections of the dark, old sandstone
exposed by ocean waves.
The fault has little vertical movement. Each section to
the West of a fault break moves northwesterly away from the immediate
one on the East side. There are 5 known separate sections of the fault
where they have moved. The easternmost follows under Highway One. The
next three are in the field, obvious only by the offset of our creek
moving it north and by the deep cut bays on the north and south of our
peninsula. The sea mostly exposes the Westernmost, where the geologists
first saw the fault, and with a little imagination one can easily see
it.
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