查科河以北部分支流流域的第四纪历史与景观发育

L. Smith
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The character of drainage-basin evolution during regional dissection is a function of initial basin shape, relative relief of the drainage basin, distribution and proportion of mudrock to sandstone bedrock units, and distribution and preservation of sandy surficial deposits. Sandstone outcrop, elongate low-relief morphology, and accumulation of extensive sandy surficial deposits reduced sediment yield and downcutting in the Tsaya basin. Extensive badland development in the Ah-shi-sle-pah basin was augmented by the dominance of mudrock bedrock in the basin, a high drainage-basin relief ratio, and minimal preservation of sandy surficial deposits. INTRODUCTION SURFICIAL GEOLOGY The subtle topography in the northern tributaries to the Chaco River is interrupted locally by regions characterized by bedrock outcrop, high erosion rates and a badland topography. The Alamo, Coal Creek, Tsaya and Ah-shi-sle-pah drainage basins north of the Chaco River display a wide range of landforms and surficial processes characteristic of the region. The purposes of this paper are to describe the geomorphic history of the region and to discuss those geomorphic factors that have influenced drainage-basin evolution and the present distribution of the region's distinct landforms. The northern tributary drainage basins to the Chaco River are oriented across the strike of northeast-dipping Cretaceous and Paleogene sandstones, mudrocks, coal and minor conglomerate in the southwestern San Juan Basin (Fig. 1). Bedrock formations crop out at similar distances upstream from the Chaco River in each of the drainage basins. Although similar bedrock units crop out in each basin, variable thicknesses of bedrock units results in different proportions of sandstone-tomudrock among the study basins (Table 1). Many of the low relief, vegetated landforms in the northern tributary drainage basins of the Chaco River are capped by alluvium that is part of a topographically stepped Pleistocene and Holocene sequence (Fig. 4). Regional correlation of these deposits allows comparison of the differing downcutting histories of the basins. These alluvial deposits range in topographic position from present-day drainage divides to terraces to valley floors (Fig. 5). These landforms and deposits represent a series of geomorphic surfaces, which are defined herein as subplanar topographic units, and associated alluvial deposits, that grade to a given baselevel. Surlicial deposits and geomorphic surfaces were correlated between study basins by soil development and analysis of topographic LANDSCAPES Landscapes of the northeastern tributary region of the Chaco River reflect erosional and depositional processes affected by bedrock control, alluvial sedimentation and periodic eolian activity. The upper and lower portion of the study basins are characterized by canyons, cuestas and mesas where resistant sandstone units control local relief. Along the outcrop belt of the Kirtland and Fruitland Formations, the landscape is characterized by either subplanar alluvial surfaces or badland topography (Fig. 2). This area, in the central portion of each study watershed, contains the most varied landforms among the study drainage basins because of the susceptibility to erosion of the mudrock-dominated bedrock. The central portions of the Ah-shi-sle-pah and Alamo basins contain extensive badland topography and incised alluvial slopes. In contrast, the Kirtland and Fruitland Formations are mostly mantled by alluvial and eolian sediment in the Coal Creek and Tsaya basins; badland topography is limited to local areas (Table I; Figs. 2 and 3). Whereas the Ah-shi-sle-pah and Alamo basins are undergoing widespread badlands erosion, Tsaya Wash and Coal Creek are discontinuous and currently depositing sediment. The distribution of badlands in the northern Chaco River drainage area is determined by a number of factors, including the local proportion of mudrock to sandstone bedrock, deposition of sandy mantles by fluvial and eolian processes, the amount of headcutting in any given stream, and the incision history and form of the drainage system (Wells, 1983; Smith, 1983a, b). TABLE I. Morphometric and areal characteristics of selected northern tributary drainage basins, Chaco River watershed. Alamo Coal Creek Tsaya Ah-shi-sle-pah","PeriodicalId":325871,"journal":{"name":"San Juan Basin IV","volume":"23 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Quaternary history and landscape development of some tributary drainage basins north of Chaco River\",\"authors\":\"L. Smith\",\"doi\":\"10.56577/ffc-43.391\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Topography in the northeastern tributary watersheds to the Chaco River is characterized by either subplanar alluvial surfaces or badland topography. The Alamo and Ah-shi-sle-pah watersheds contain extensive badland topography, whereas the Coal Creek and Tsaya basins are characterized by broad alluvial surfaces. Correlation of geomorphic surfaces between the drainage basins allows comparison of the responses each basin had to baselevel falls. The two oldest geomorphic surfaces extended beyond present-day drainage divides; drainage divides and the resulting proportions of sandstone and mudrock bedrock lithologies were inherited during the incision of these surfaces. Three younger geomorphic surfaces formed during periodic downcutting of the drainages. The character of drainage-basin evolution during regional dissection is a function of initial basin shape, relative relief of the drainage basin, distribution and proportion of mudrock to sandstone bedrock units, and distribution and preservation of sandy surficial deposits. Sandstone outcrop, elongate low-relief morphology, and accumulation of extensive sandy surficial deposits reduced sediment yield and downcutting in the Tsaya basin. Extensive badland development in the Ah-shi-sle-pah basin was augmented by the dominance of mudrock bedrock in the basin, a high drainage-basin relief ratio, and minimal preservation of sandy surficial deposits. INTRODUCTION SURFICIAL GEOLOGY The subtle topography in the northern tributaries to the Chaco River is interrupted locally by regions characterized by bedrock outcrop, high erosion rates and a badland topography. The Alamo, Coal Creek, Tsaya and Ah-shi-sle-pah drainage basins north of the Chaco River display a wide range of landforms and surficial processes characteristic of the region. The purposes of this paper are to describe the geomorphic history of the region and to discuss those geomorphic factors that have influenced drainage-basin evolution and the present distribution of the region's distinct landforms. The northern tributary drainage basins to the Chaco River are oriented across the strike of northeast-dipping Cretaceous and Paleogene sandstones, mudrocks, coal and minor conglomerate in the southwestern San Juan Basin (Fig. 1). Bedrock formations crop out at similar distances upstream from the Chaco River in each of the drainage basins. Although similar bedrock units crop out in each basin, variable thicknesses of bedrock units results in different proportions of sandstone-tomudrock among the study basins (Table 1). Many of the low relief, vegetated landforms in the northern tributary drainage basins of the Chaco River are capped by alluvium that is part of a topographically stepped Pleistocene and Holocene sequence (Fig. 4). Regional correlation of these deposits allows comparison of the differing downcutting histories of the basins. These alluvial deposits range in topographic position from present-day drainage divides to terraces to valley floors (Fig. 5). These landforms and deposits represent a series of geomorphic surfaces, which are defined herein as subplanar topographic units, and associated alluvial deposits, that grade to a given baselevel. Surlicial deposits and geomorphic surfaces were correlated between study basins by soil development and analysis of topographic LANDSCAPES Landscapes of the northeastern tributary region of the Chaco River reflect erosional and depositional processes affected by bedrock control, alluvial sedimentation and periodic eolian activity. The upper and lower portion of the study basins are characterized by canyons, cuestas and mesas where resistant sandstone units control local relief. Along the outcrop belt of the Kirtland and Fruitland Formations, the landscape is characterized by either subplanar alluvial surfaces or badland topography (Fig. 2). This area, in the central portion of each study watershed, contains the most varied landforms among the study drainage basins because of the susceptibility to erosion of the mudrock-dominated bedrock. The central portions of the Ah-shi-sle-pah and Alamo basins contain extensive badland topography and incised alluvial slopes. In contrast, the Kirtland and Fruitland Formations are mostly mantled by alluvial and eolian sediment in the Coal Creek and Tsaya basins; badland topography is limited to local areas (Table I; Figs. 2 and 3). Whereas the Ah-shi-sle-pah and Alamo basins are undergoing widespread badlands erosion, Tsaya Wash and Coal Creek are discontinuous and currently depositing sediment. The distribution of badlands in the northern Chaco River drainage area is determined by a number of factors, including the local proportion of mudrock to sandstone bedrock, deposition of sandy mantles by fluvial and eolian processes, the amount of headcutting in any given stream, and the incision history and form of the drainage system (Wells, 1983; Smith, 1983a, b). TABLE I. Morphometric and areal characteristics of selected northern tributary drainage basins, Chaco River watershed. 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摘要

查科河东北支流流域的地形以次平面冲积面或荒地地形为特征。Alamo和ah -shi- slepah流域包含广泛的荒地地形,而Coal Creek和Tsaya盆地则具有宽阔的冲积面。流域之间地貌表面的相关性可以比较每个流域对基准面下降的反应。两个最古老的地貌表面延伸到今天的水系分水岭之外;在这些表面的切割过程中,继承了水系划分以及由此产生的砂岩和泥岩基岩岩性的比例。三个较年轻的地貌表面形成于排水的周期性下行过程中。区域剖分过程中流域-盆地演化特征与盆地初始形态、流域相对起伏程度、泥岩-砂岩基岩单元的分布和比例、砂质表层沉积物的分布和保存有关。砂岩的露头、细长的低起伏形态和广泛的砂质表层沉积物的堆积减少了察雅盆地的产沙量和下切。泥岩基岩占主导地位,流域-盆地起伏比高,砂质表层沉积物保存较少,增强了阿石-斯勒帕盆地广泛的荒地发育。查科河北部支流的微妙地形在局部被基岩露头、高侵蚀率和荒地地形所打断。查科河以北的Alamo、Coal Creek、Tsaya和ah -shi- slepah流域具有该地区广泛的地貌和地表过程特征。本文的目的是描述该地区的地貌历史,并讨论影响流域演变和该地区独特地貌分布的地貌因素。查科河北部支流流域的走向与圣胡安盆地西南部的白垩系和古近系砂岩、泥岩、煤和小砾岩的东北倾走向一致(图1)。在查科河上游,每个流域的基岩地层都以相似的距离出现。虽然每个盆地中都有相似的基岩单元,但基岩单元厚度的不同导致了研究盆地中砂岩-泥质岩的比例不同(表1)。查科河北部支流流域的植被地貌被冲积物覆盖,冲积物是地形阶梯式更新世和全新世序列的一部分(图4)。这些沉积物的区域对比可以比较不同盆地的下切历史。这些冲积沉积物的地形位置从现在的分水岭到梯田再到谷底(图5)。这些地貌和沉积物代表了一系列的地貌表面,在这里被定义为亚平面地形单元,以及相关的冲积沉积物,这些冲积沉积物可以达到给定的基准面。通过土壤发育和地形景观分析,对研究流域的泥沙沉积和地貌表面进行了对比。查科河东北支流地区的地貌景观反映了基岩控制、冲积作用和周期性风成活动影响下的侵蚀和沉积过程。研究盆地的上、下部以峡谷、断层、台地为特征,抵抗性砂岩单元控制着局部地形。沿着科特兰组和果地组的露头带,景观的特征要么是次平面冲积面,要么是荒地地形(图2)。由于易受泥岩为主的基岩侵蚀,该区域位于每个研究流域的中心部分,在研究流域中包含最多样化的地貌。ah -shi- slepah盆地和Alamo盆地的中心部分包含广泛的荒地地形和切割的冲积斜坡。相比之下,煤溪盆地和察雅盆地的科特兰组和果地组主要被冲积和风成沉积物覆盖;荒地地形仅限于局部地区(表一;图2和3)ah -shi- slepah盆地和Alamo盆地正在经历广泛的荒地侵蚀,而察雅沃什和煤溪则是不连续的,目前正在沉积沉积物。查科河北部流域的荒地分布是由许多因素决定的,包括当地泥岩与砂岩基岩的比例、河流和风成过程对砂质地幔的沉积、任何河流的切割量、以及切割历史和排水系统的形式(Wells, 1983;史密斯,1983a, b)。
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Quaternary history and landscape development of some tributary drainage basins north of Chaco River
Topography in the northeastern tributary watersheds to the Chaco River is characterized by either subplanar alluvial surfaces or badland topography. The Alamo and Ah-shi-sle-pah watersheds contain extensive badland topography, whereas the Coal Creek and Tsaya basins are characterized by broad alluvial surfaces. Correlation of geomorphic surfaces between the drainage basins allows comparison of the responses each basin had to baselevel falls. The two oldest geomorphic surfaces extended beyond present-day drainage divides; drainage divides and the resulting proportions of sandstone and mudrock bedrock lithologies were inherited during the incision of these surfaces. Three younger geomorphic surfaces formed during periodic downcutting of the drainages. The character of drainage-basin evolution during regional dissection is a function of initial basin shape, relative relief of the drainage basin, distribution and proportion of mudrock to sandstone bedrock units, and distribution and preservation of sandy surficial deposits. Sandstone outcrop, elongate low-relief morphology, and accumulation of extensive sandy surficial deposits reduced sediment yield and downcutting in the Tsaya basin. Extensive badland development in the Ah-shi-sle-pah basin was augmented by the dominance of mudrock bedrock in the basin, a high drainage-basin relief ratio, and minimal preservation of sandy surficial deposits. INTRODUCTION SURFICIAL GEOLOGY The subtle topography in the northern tributaries to the Chaco River is interrupted locally by regions characterized by bedrock outcrop, high erosion rates and a badland topography. The Alamo, Coal Creek, Tsaya and Ah-shi-sle-pah drainage basins north of the Chaco River display a wide range of landforms and surficial processes characteristic of the region. The purposes of this paper are to describe the geomorphic history of the region and to discuss those geomorphic factors that have influenced drainage-basin evolution and the present distribution of the region's distinct landforms. The northern tributary drainage basins to the Chaco River are oriented across the strike of northeast-dipping Cretaceous and Paleogene sandstones, mudrocks, coal and minor conglomerate in the southwestern San Juan Basin (Fig. 1). Bedrock formations crop out at similar distances upstream from the Chaco River in each of the drainage basins. Although similar bedrock units crop out in each basin, variable thicknesses of bedrock units results in different proportions of sandstone-tomudrock among the study basins (Table 1). Many of the low relief, vegetated landforms in the northern tributary drainage basins of the Chaco River are capped by alluvium that is part of a topographically stepped Pleistocene and Holocene sequence (Fig. 4). Regional correlation of these deposits allows comparison of the differing downcutting histories of the basins. These alluvial deposits range in topographic position from present-day drainage divides to terraces to valley floors (Fig. 5). These landforms and deposits represent a series of geomorphic surfaces, which are defined herein as subplanar topographic units, and associated alluvial deposits, that grade to a given baselevel. Surlicial deposits and geomorphic surfaces were correlated between study basins by soil development and analysis of topographic LANDSCAPES Landscapes of the northeastern tributary region of the Chaco River reflect erosional and depositional processes affected by bedrock control, alluvial sedimentation and periodic eolian activity. The upper and lower portion of the study basins are characterized by canyons, cuestas and mesas where resistant sandstone units control local relief. Along the outcrop belt of the Kirtland and Fruitland Formations, the landscape is characterized by either subplanar alluvial surfaces or badland topography (Fig. 2). This area, in the central portion of each study watershed, contains the most varied landforms among the study drainage basins because of the susceptibility to erosion of the mudrock-dominated bedrock. The central portions of the Ah-shi-sle-pah and Alamo basins contain extensive badland topography and incised alluvial slopes. In contrast, the Kirtland and Fruitland Formations are mostly mantled by alluvial and eolian sediment in the Coal Creek and Tsaya basins; badland topography is limited to local areas (Table I; Figs. 2 and 3). Whereas the Ah-shi-sle-pah and Alamo basins are undergoing widespread badlands erosion, Tsaya Wash and Coal Creek are discontinuous and currently depositing sediment. The distribution of badlands in the northern Chaco River drainage area is determined by a number of factors, including the local proportion of mudrock to sandstone bedrock, deposition of sandy mantles by fluvial and eolian processes, the amount of headcutting in any given stream, and the incision history and form of the drainage system (Wells, 1983; Smith, 1983a, b). TABLE I. Morphometric and areal characteristics of selected northern tributary drainage basins, Chaco River watershed. Alamo Coal Creek Tsaya Ah-shi-sle-pah
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