CONTENTS 
 
Introduction 
Physiography 
Weather Data 
Geologic History 
Changing Climates 
Weathering & Erosion 
Carbonate Rocks 
Granitic Rocks 
Volcanic Rocks 
Faults 
Pediments 
Stream Channels 
Stream Terraces 
The Mojave River 
Playas 
Sand Dunes 
Human Impacts 
References 
  
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Landforms & Erosional Processes 
      Pediments and Alluvial Fans
      
The term, mountain front, is an imaginary borderline between a 
      mountainous area and a low, gently dipping plain (either a pediment or 
      alluvial fan). A 
pediment
 is a gently sloping erosion surface or 
      plain of low relief formed by running water in arid or semiarid region at 
      the base of a receding mountain front. A pediment is underlain by bedrock 
      that is typically covered by a thin, discontinuous veneer of soil and 
      alluvium derived from upland areas. Much of this alluvial material is in 
      transit across the surface, moving during episodic storm events or blown 
      by wind.
 
 
  
NPS photo 
 
Granite exposures and rounded boulders shaped by spheroidal 
            weathering crop out on the pediment surface blanketed by a the high 
            Mojave desert mixed juniper and Joshua-tree forest in the vicinity 
            of Teutonia Mine along Cima Road. 
 
      Pediment-forming processes are much-debated, but it is clear that rocks 
      such as granite and coarse sandstone (and Tertiary conglomerate made up of 
      boulders of these rocks) form virtually all pediments in the Mojave 
      Desert. These rocks disintegrate grain-by-grain, rather than fracturing 
     and then being reduced in grain size by alluvial transport processes.
      
Alluvial fans
 are aggrading deposits of alluvium deposited by a 
      stream issuing from a canyon onto a surface or valley floor. Once in the 
      valley, the stream is unconfined and can migrate back and forth, 
      depositing alluvial sediments across a broad area. View from above, an 
      individual deposit looks like an open fan with the apex being at the 
      valley mouth. Typically the fans formed by multiple canyons along a 
      mountain front join to form a continuous fan apron, termed a 
      piedmont or 
bajada.
 
 
  
Lucy Gray Fan 
 
Aerial view of Lucy Gray Fan, an alluvial fan that radiates from 
            a canyon cutting through the Lucy Gray Mountains and drains into the 
            Ivanpah Valley (north of the Mojave National Preserve in Nevada). 
            Below the mouth of the canyon the stream divides into several 
            channels. Active channels (void of vegetation) appear white, 
            whereas, darker areas on the fan are covered with vegetation and 
            possibly a thin veneer of soil. Channels migrate as they become 
            choked with sediment as flood waters seep into the ground. Coarser 
            rock fragments remain high on the fan, whereas finer materials 
            (sand, silt, and clay) will continue to migrate downslope. Only 
            during more intense storms will water reach and pond on the Ivanpah 
            playa. 
 
Large areas within the Mojave Desert are pediment surfaces. These 
      pediments reflect both the antiquity of some mountain structures in the 
      region and the persistent arid climatic conditions in the region. Perhaps 
      the most notable pediment in the region is Cima Dome, 
a very broad, 
      shield-shaped upland area within the Mojave National Preserve (below). 
      This great, gently-sloped upland area represent a region where 
      desert-style weathering and erosion has stripped away most of the relief 
      to the point that the erosion keeps pace with surface weathering and that 
      surface gradient is gentle enough to prevent gully-style downcutting. 
      Isolated rocky hills or knobs that rise abruptly from an erosional surface 
      in desert regions are called inselbergs.
 
 
  
NPS photo 
 
The broad, gradual arch of Cima Dome is a mature pediment 
            surface broken by relatively small "rock islands" (inselbergs). 
            Teutonia Peak is the small peak to the left of the high point on 
            Cima Dome. This view is from along Cima Road, about five miles (8 
            kilometers) south of Interstate 15. The flat plain in the foreground 
            is also a pediment with a thin veneer of alluvium. 
 
 
  
NPS photo 
 
This view from the top of 
Teutonia Peak
 faces north over the 
            northern flank of 
Cima Dome. Rock 
knobs of spheroidal-weathering 
            granite bedrock rise above the pediment surface that consists of 
            barren weathered granite bedrock covered with a thin intermittent 
            veneer of sediment and soil. This expansive pediment surface 
            probably extends to the flank of the mountains in the distance. 
            (This is looking back toward the foreground area shown in the image 
            above.) Rock underlying Teutonia Peak is Jurassic grainite, which 
            generally does not form pediments; adjacent pediment-forming rock of 
            Cima Dome is Cretaceous in age. 
 
  
NPS photo 
 
Pediment domes and islenbergs define the landscape in the 
            central portion of the Mojave National Preserve. This view faces 
            north from an alluvial fan draining the Providence Mountains towards 
            the pediment dome upland region of the Marl Mountains. Kelso Wash is 
            the axial trunk stream in the middle of the valley. In the 
            foreground, a relatively stable alluvial fan surface consists of 
            desert pavement broken by braided stream channels and a patchwork of 
            vegetation (mostly white bursage [gray] and creosote bush [green]). 
            Total surface relief in this lower portion of the fan is in the 
            range of one meter. 
 
The development of pediments and alluvial fans is progressive with the 
      uplift of mountains and subsidence of adjacent basins. Pediments reflect a 
      relative "static equilibrium" between erosion of materials from upland 
      areas and deposition within an adjacent basin. The slope of the landscape 
      is gentle enough that weathering and transport of sediments from upland 
      areas and the pediment that no significant stream incision occurs. In many 
      areas throughout the Mojave region it is nearly impossible to see where a 
      pediment ends and alluvial fans begin, however, geophysical data and 
      water-well drilling shows that in many places sediment filled basins do 
      occur adjacent to pediment areas. 
 
      The impact of climate change on alluvial fans has been the focus of 
      much research. Studies show that a period of elevated alluvial fan 
      deposition occurred between the time of the Last Glacial Maximum (about 
      15,000 years ago) and the beginning of arid conditions in the early 
      Holocene (about 9,400 years ago). McDonald et al, (2003) suggest 
      that the climatic transition from seasonable wet conditions to arid 
      conditions, punctuated by extreme storm event (possibly associated with 
      tropical cyclones) may be responsible for this change. Today, heavy 
      rainfalls rarely provide enough precipitation to allow enough surface 
      runoff to occur on highly porous soils and colluvium. Only during major 
      stream event will water discharge in volume and intensity to move material 
      from mountain source areas to lower fan areas. In addition to extreme 
      storm events,the buildup of alluvial fan deposits at this 
      Pleistocene/Holocene time transition may be linked with the transition 
      from widespread plant cover to the more barren character of the modern 
      Mojave landscape. Die-back of plants would decrease rooting, making more 
      mountain-side material available for erosion and transport to alluvial 
      fans. 
 
Next > Stream Channel Development 
 
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