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How Rivers Get Across Mountains: Transverse Drainages

Author

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  • Phillip H. Larson
  • Norman Meek
  • John Douglass
  • Ronald I. Dorn
  • Yeong Bae Seong

Abstract

Although mountains represent a barrier to the flow of liquid water across our planet and an Earth of impenetrable mountains would have produced a very different geography, many rivers do cross mountain ranges. These transverse drainages cross mountains through one of four general mechanisms: antecedence—the river maintains its course during mountain building (orogeny); superimposition—a river erodes across buried bedrock atop erodible sediment or sedimentary rock, providing a route across what later becomes an exhumed mountain range; piracy or capture—where a steeper gradient path captures a lower gradient drainage across a low relief interfluve; and overflow—a basin fills with sediment and water, ultimately breaching the lowest sill to create a new river. This article reviews research that aids in identifying the mechanism responsible for a transverse drainage, notes a major misconception about the power of headward eroding streams that has dogged scholarship, and examines the transverse drainage at the Grand Canyon in Arizona.

Suggested Citation

  • Phillip H. Larson & Norman Meek & John Douglass & Ronald I. Dorn & Yeong Bae Seong, 2017. "How Rivers Get Across Mountains: Transverse Drainages," Annals of the American Association of Geographers, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 107(2), pages 274-283, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:raagxx:v:107:y:2017:i:2:p:274-283
    DOI: 10.1080/24694452.2016.1203283
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