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Stratigraphy of Colorado River deposits in lower Mohave Valley, Arizona and California

December 31, 2007

Deposits in lower Mohave Valley and upper Topock Gorge near Topock, Arizona and Park Moabi, California record a succession of depositional and erosional events since late Miocene time that relate to the development of the Colorado River. Upper Miocene alluvial fans were deposited toward a depocenter east of the present valley bottom, indicating there was no valley outlet then through the area of Topock Gorge. The lower Pliocene Bouse Formation subsequently accumulated to thicknesses of at least 330 m in ancestral Mohave Valley before most of it was incised by a Colorado River that carried clasts as large as 0.9 m and drained southward through ancestral Topock Gorge. Pliocene fluvial sandstone and conglomerate exposed in this area record 160 m of subsequent aggradation. One or more sedimentary sequences of varied fluvial, paludal, and alluvial fan environments accumulated on the margin of the floodplain in Pleistocene time, including during deposition of the upper Pleistocene Chemehuevi Formation of Longwell (1936). River boulders as large as 1.2 m derived from Pliocene gravel were deposited in terraces along the river during later incision. Vertebrate fossil finds and historical descriptions of the 19th century enrich the history of the area

Publication Year 2007
Title Stratigraphy of Colorado River deposits in lower Mohave Valley, Arizona and California
Authors Keith A. Howard, D.V. Malmon
Publication Type Conference Paper
Publication Subtype Conference Paper
Index ID 70198258
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Geology, Minerals, Energy, and Geophysics Science Center