Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Holocene alluvial stratigraphy and response to climate change in the Roaring River valley, Front Range, Colorado, USA

August 29, 2012

Stratigraphic analyses and radiocarbon geochronology of alluvial deposits exposed along the Roaring River, Colorado, lead to three principal conclusions: (1) the opinion that stream channels in the higher parts of the Front Range are relics of the Pleistocene and nonalluvial under the present climate, as argued in a water-rights trial USA v. Colorado, is untenable, (2) beds of clast-supported gravel alternate in vertical succession with beds of fine-grained sediment (sand, mud, and peat) in response to centennial-scale changes in snowmelt-driven peak discharges, and (3) alluvial strata provide information about Holocene climate history that complements the history provided by cirque moraines, periglacial deposits, and paleontological data. Most alluvial strata are of late Holocene age and record, among other things, that: (1) the largest peak flows since the end of the Pleistocene occurred during the late Holocene; (2) the occurrence of a mid- to late Holocene interval (~2450–1630(?) cal yr BP) of warmer climate, which is not clearly identified in palynological records; and (3) the Little Ice Age climate seems to have had little impact on stream channels, except perhaps for minor (~1 m) incision. Published

Publication Year 2012
Title Holocene alluvial stratigraphy and response to climate change in the Roaring River valley, Front Range, Colorado, USA
DOI 10.1016/j.yqres.2012.05.005
Authors Richard F. Madole
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Quaternary Research
Index ID 70039717
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Geology and Environmental Change Science Center