Late Cenozoic Drainage History of the Southwestern Great Basin and Lower Colorado River Region: Geologic and Biotic Perspectives

Multistage late Cenozoic evolution of the Amargosa River drainage, southwestern Nevada and eastern California
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Published:January 01, 2008
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CiteCitation
Christopher M. Menges, 2008. "Multistage late Cenozoic evolution of the Amargosa River drainage, southwestern Nevada and eastern California", Late Cenozoic Drainage History of the Southwestern Great Basin and Lower Colorado River Region: Geologic and Biotic Perspectives, Marith C. Reheis, Robert Hershler, David M. Miller
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Stratigraphic and geomorphic analyses reveal that the regional drainage basin of the modern Amargosa River formed via multistage linkage of formerly isolated basins in a diachronous series of integration events between late Miocene and latest Pleistocene–Holocene time. The 275-km-long Amargosa River system drains generally southward across a large (15,540 km2) watershed in southwestern Nevada and eastern California to its terminus in central Death Valley. This drainage basin is divided into four major subbasins along the main channel and several minor subbasins on tributaries; these subbasins contain features, including central valley lowlands surrounded by highlands that form external divides...
- Amargosa Desert
- Basin and Range Province
- bedrock
- California
- Cenozoic
- climate change
- Death Valley
- drainage basins
- drainage patterns
- fluvial features
- Great Basin
- landform evolution
- landforms
- Miocene
- Mojave Desert
- Neogene
- Nevada
- North America
- paleoclimatology
- paleoenvironment
- paleolakes
- paleorelief
- Pleistocene
- Quaternary
- rivers
- terraces
- Tertiary
- tributaries
- United States
- uplifts
- valleys
- eastern California
- southwestern Nevada
- Amargosa Valley
- Salt Creek basin
- Amargosa River basin
- Amargosa Canyon
- Tecopa Subbasin
- Beatty Narrows
- Eagle Mountain Narrows