CA California Porch

Almanac note · History and culture

Fossil Reef Park shows Laguna Hills' old ocean floor

Fossil Reef Park protects a small piece of a 17-million-year-old reef, making Laguna Hills feel connected to an ancient tropical bay.

Laguna HillsFossil Reef Parkfossils

Laguna Hills has one of those local stories that changes how the ground feels under your feet. Fossil Reef Park protects a small preserved part of a reef that formed about 17 million years ago, when this part of Orange County was under a warm, shallow sea.

The park is small, but the story is big. The reef is tied to fossil-rich beach sand and marine life, including shark teeth and other old sea creatures. The city park page also ties it to a longer Pecten Reef deposit that once stretched across the Saddleback Valley.

The stop feels different from a regular pocket park. You are looking at a piece of very old Orange County, long before freeways, ranches, and neighborhoods. It is a good reminder that some suburban places still carry wild geology right at the surface.

For a visit, treat it as a short history-and-geology stop. The park is on Via Lomas, and the real payoff is slowing down enough to picture the hills as an old sea floor.

Where to see it

Fossil Reef Park on Via Lomas in Laguna Hills.

Official sources

Official source trail

Reviewed July 1, 2026

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