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Why Does A River Run Through It?
By Jim Davis
Rivers and selected sites discussed in this article.
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Even though we are a “desert” state, Utah’s rivers are world-renowned
among river runners and geoscientists. Several of
America’s early geologists, including G.K. Gilbert, W.M. Davis,
C.E. Dutton, and J.W. Powell contributed to theories of stream
evolution from observations made in Utah.
Rivers typically
originate in the mountains, flow away from them in a more-or-less constant direction, enter increasingly broad river plains,
and terminate at an ocean. But many rivers in Utah flow toward
and across mountains, run contrary to valleys, make U-turns,
and many never reach the ocean.
Over long time spans, rivers tend to change course in response
to tectonic processes (such as rising mountains and lowering
basins) or changing climate. Streams can also adjust their
course rapidly, sometimes instantaneously, in response to catastrophic
events such as flooding, volcanic eruptions, landslides,
earthquakes, or by stream capture (stream “piracy”), where a
river intercepts a neighboring river and diverts or “steals” water
from its drainage basin.
Whether the changes are fast or slow,
water needs to flow downhill, but in some places a river’s seemingly
bizarre behavior can leave one struggling to come up with
a reasonable explanation!
All three of Utah’s physiographic provinces—Colorado Plateau,
Rocky Mountains, Basin and Range—have textbook examples
of streams that exhibit anomalous courses.
Within the Colorado
Plateau, for example, the Paradox Basin is named for the
Colorado River’s paradoxical pattern of flowing perpendicular
to valleys and faults. This is largely due to the presence of thick
layers of salt buried beneath other layers of sedimentary rock.
In
the Rocky Mountains, there are numerous well-known examples
of rivers that run directly across mountain ranges. This phenomenon
can arise when river erosion exhumes buried geologic
structures, and the river subsequently cuts down through
them while maintaining its prior course; these are known as
“superimposed” streams. Another case of mountain-dissecting
streams is “antecedence,” where mountains rise and pre-existing
streams cut into them as quickly as they rise, the streams again
maintaining their original course.
Finally, no major streams in
the Utah part of the Basin and Range Province make it to the
Pacific Ocean, instead emptying into closed basins of the west
desert, but this has not always been the case.
The following are
a few of the numerous occurrences of Utah streams that run
extraordinary courses.
The Colorado River
After emerging from a canyon carved into sandstone bedrock,
the Colorado River flows westward across the marshy northern
end of Moab Valley. Then, in defiance of the imposing sandstone cliffs on the west side of the valley, the river turns toward the
cliffs and flows into them at The Portal, continuing on its way
through another sandstone canyon. The Portal is perhaps the
most striking example of the Colorado flowing across, rather
than along, valleys within the Paradox Basin.
The Colorado River cuts across Moab Valley and exits through The Portal.
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The elongate
valleys of the Paradox Basin are the result of subterranean
salt, originally deposited through evaporation of seawater in
a shallow embayment some 300 million years ago, leaving
behind the ocean salts. During burial, the low-density salt was
squeezed and flowed upward to form diapirs (masses of salt
that pierced or intruded the overlying strata) or walls of salt
up to 2 miles thick. The valleys form as the underlying salts
dissolve, and the overburden collapses in a process known as
“salt tectonics.” The Colorado River, indifferent to the sinking
valleys beneath it, maintains its original course.
The Green River
The Uinta Mountains once separated the drainages of the two
largest rivers in Utah, the Green and Colorado Rivers. Previously,
the Green had flowed eastward to join the greater Mississippi
River drainage system, which empties into the Gulf of Mexico,
and the Colorado flowed southward to empty into the Gulf of
California.
Formerly buried beneath the landscape, erosion has uncovered Split
Mountain, and the channel of the Green River is now superimposed onto
it. The river has cut through soft and hard rock, producing wide valleys and
narrow gorges, respectively. Scale varies in this perspective. High altitude
oblique view looking east. The Green River flows from left to right.
Image
courtesy of the Image Science & Analysis Laboratory, NASA Johnson Space
Center, ISS015-E-28000, http://eol.jsc.nasa.gov.
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Now, the Green flows toward the Uintas, then parallels
them, and then turns and crosses their eastern flank, eventually
joining the Colorado River in Canyonlands National Park.
The modern cutting of the Green River through the eastern
Uintas intrigued geologist and explorer John Wesley Powell,
and has been described as the “classic conundrum” of drainage
anomalies. Although the story is complex and not fully understood,
a combination of antecedence, superimposition, and
stream capture is suspected.
Regardless of the mechanism, the
union of the Green River Basin in southwestern Wyoming and
the Colorado River drainage greatly energized the entire stream
system, causing it to erode the spectacular canyons of Dinosaur
National Monument (Canyon of Lodore, Whirlpool Canyon,
Split Mountain Canyon). Farther downstream, increased discharge
also contributed to the incision of the amazing canyons
of the Colorado Plateau.
Parowan Gap
Parowan Gap (between arrows), Iron County. Oblique view looking eastsoutheast.
GoogleEarth image. Scale varies in this perpective.
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Parowan Gap, the product of a bygone stream, is a 600-foot deep
canyon carved into the Red Hills northwest of Parowan.
Millions of years ago, the hills began to rise as a result of fault movement, and the stream eroded the Parowan Gap canyon
across the emerging ridge. An often-used analogy is that of a
buzz saw (the river) slicing a groove (Parowan Gap) into a log
rising up from below (the Red Hills).
The situation persisted for
some time, but the equilibrium between rising hills and eroding
river came to an end when either the hills rose too rapidly, or
more likely the local climate became drier, or perhaps a combination
of both. In any case the stream eventually vanished,
but it left its mark as a “wind gap.”
Similarly, the Provo, Weber,
and Ogden Rivers are actively cutting canyons across a rising
Wasatch Range. Like the river that bisected the Red Hills, these
rivers are antecedent to the range and eroding into the rising
mountains.
The Bear River
The Bear River is the longest continuously flowing river in
North America that does not reach the ocean. The Bear River’s
headwaters are in Utah’s Uinta Mountains; the river then flows
into Wyoming, back into Utah, back into Wyoming again, into
Idaho, and then returns to Utah where it drains into Great Salt
Lake. After traveling a several-hundred-mile horseshoe-shaped
course, the river ends only about 90 miles from its source.
Yet,
water of the ancestral Bear River did reach the ocean when it
was a tributary of the Snake River, flowing into the Columbia
River and on to the Pacific Ocean. Eruption of lava flows in
southeastern Idaho diverted the Bear into the Great Salt Lake
drainage basin, which has been the river’s terminus for the past
50,000 years.
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