Update search
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
NARROW
Format
Article Type
Journal
Publisher
Section
GeoRef Subject
-
all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
-
Africa
-
North Africa
-
Atlas Mountains
-
Moroccan Atlas Mountains
-
High Atlas (1)
-
-
-
Morocco
-
Moroccan Atlas Mountains
-
High Atlas (1)
-
-
-
-
-
Europe
-
Southern Europe
-
Iberian Peninsula
-
Spain
-
Andalusia Spain
-
Almeria Spain (1)
-
-
-
-
-
Western Europe
-
United Kingdom
-
Great Britain
-
England
-
Isle of Wight England (1)
-
-
-
-
-
-
South America
-
Chile (1)
-
-
-
geologic age
-
Cenozoic
-
Quaternary
-
Holocene (1)
-
middle Quaternary (1)
-
Pleistocene (1)
-
upper Quaternary (1)
-
-
Tertiary
-
Neogene
-
Pliocene (1)
-
-
-
-
-
Primary terms
-
Africa
-
North Africa
-
Atlas Mountains
-
Moroccan Atlas Mountains
-
High Atlas (1)
-
-
-
Morocco
-
Moroccan Atlas Mountains
-
High Atlas (1)
-
-
-
-
-
Cenozoic
-
Quaternary
-
Holocene (1)
-
middle Quaternary (1)
-
Pleistocene (1)
-
upper Quaternary (1)
-
-
Tertiary
-
Neogene
-
Pliocene (1)
-
-
-
-
Europe
-
Southern Europe
-
Iberian Peninsula
-
Spain
-
Andalusia Spain
-
Almeria Spain (1)
-
-
-
-
-
Western Europe
-
United Kingdom
-
Great Britain
-
England
-
Isle of Wight England (1)
-
-
-
-
-
-
geomorphology (2)
-
roads (1)
-
sedimentary rocks
-
carbonate rocks
-
limestone (1)
-
-
clastic rocks
-
mudstone (1)
-
-
-
sedimentary structures
-
planar bedding structures
-
bedding (1)
-
-
-
sedimentation (1)
-
slope stability (1)
-
South America
-
Chile (1)
-
-
tectonics (1)
-
-
sedimentary rocks
-
sedimentary rocks
-
carbonate rocks
-
limestone (1)
-
-
clastic rocks
-
mudstone (1)
-
-
-
-
sedimentary structures
-
channels (1)
-
sedimentary structures
-
planar bedding structures
-
bedding (1)
-
-
-
GeoRef Categories
Era and Period
Epoch and Age
Book Series
Date
Availability
Abstract Conventional sedimentological models of alluvial fan sequences tend to be based on fans in subsiding sedimentary basins. Fans in uplifting terrains are rather different. We examined the sequence of fan delta and alluvial fan deposition from the Pliocene to the Late Quaternary in the uplifting terrain of the Neogene sedimentary basins of Almería, Betic Cordillera, SE Spain. There were three phases of fan deposition, each yielding particular morpho-sedimentological characteristics and each having distinctive spatial distributions. The first phase was the Pliocene fan deltas, deposited where the larger river systems entered the receding early Pliocene seas. This phase was followed during the late Pliocene–Early Pleistocene by a phase of extensive alluvial fan deposition extending from the mountain fronts to the basin centres. Continued uplift occurred during the Pleistocene, resulting in incision of the drainage network and dissection of the Plio-Pleistocene fan systems. The third phase, during the Quaternary, involved much smaller mountain front alluvial fans set well below the Plio-Pleistocene fans, except in local areas of tectonic subsidence where extensive fans were formed. The older fans exhibit stacked sedimentary successions with very little evidence of sustained vertical incision. However, the Quaternary fans show much evidence of sustained incision between major aggradational phases, often resulting in inset rather than stacked stratigraphic relationships. We interpret this to imply that, although the tectonic context was the primary temporal control on variations within the older fan successions, within the Quaternary fans the overall tectonic control has been modified by responses to the Quaternary climatic sequence.
Bedrock structural control on catchment-scale connectivity and alluvial fan processes, High Atlas Mountains, Morocco
Abstract Lithology is acknowledged to be an important internal catchment control on flow processes to adjacent alluvial fans. However, the role of inherited structural configurations (e.g. bedrock attitude) in catchment connectivity and sediment transport is rarely considered. We examine four young (<100-year-old) active tributary junction alluvial fan systems from the Dadès Valley in the High Atlas of Morocco in terms of their catchment-scale connectivity, sediment transfer and resulting alluvial fan processes. The catchments occur on the same lithologies (limestones and interbedded mudstones), but experience different passive structural configurations (tilted and structurally thickened beds). The fan systems react differently to historical peak discharges (20–172 m 3 s −1 ). Catchments containing tectonically thickened limestone units develop slot canyons, which compartmentalize the catchment by acting as barriers to sediment transfer, encouraging lower sediment to water flows on the fans. Syn-dip catchments boost connectivity and sediment delivery from translational bedrock landslides as a result of steep channel gradients, encouraging higher sediment to water flows. By contrast, translational landslides in strike-oriented drainages disrupt longitudinal connectivity by constricting the valley width, while the gradients of the main channels are supressed by the attitude of the limestone beds, encouraging localized backfilling. This diminishes the sediment to water content of the resulting flows.
Mapping landslides at different scales
Kennedy, B. A. 2006. Inventing the Earth. Ideas on Landscape Development Since 1740. : xi + 160 pp. Malden, Oxford, Carlton: Blackwell Publishing. Price £50.00 (hard covers), £19.99 (paperback). ISBN 1 4051 0187 3; 1 4051 0188 1 (pb).
Alluvial fans: geomorphology, sedimentology, dynamics – introduction. A review of alluvial-fan research
Abstract This volume presents a series of papers on the geomorphology, sedimentology and dynamics of alluvial fans, selected from those presented at the 'Alluvial Fans' Conference held in Sorbas, SE Spain in June 2003. The conference was sponsored primarily by the British Geomorphological Research Group and the British Sedimentological Research Group, both organizations affiliated to the Geological Society of London. It is some time since an international conference has been held that was exclusively devoted to the geomorphology and sedimentology of alluvial fans. The previous such conference was that organized by Terry Blair and John McPherson in 1995, and held in Death Valley, a classic setting for alluvial fans (Denny 1965; Blair & McPherson 1994 a ). Although many of the papers presented there have since been published, no dedicated volume on alluvial fans as a whole resulted from that meeting, so even longer has elapsed since there has been a specific publication devoted wholly to a series of papers on the geomorphology and sedimentology of alluvial fans (Rachocki & Church 1990). South-east Spain was chosen as the venue for this conference, partly for logistic reasons and partly because it is a tectonically active dry region within which there is a wide range of Quaternary alluvial fans. These fans exhibit differing relationships between tectonic, climatic