 |
The
Basin and Range Province
by
Stephen Marshak
Tectonic stretching of the North American continental crust during
the last 25 million years has yielded a broad rift called the Basin
and Range Province, so named because topographically, it consists
of long linear mountain ranges separated from one another by flat
plains (basins) of alluvium. The high Sierra Nevada Mountains form
the western edge of the province, while the face of the Colorado
Plateau defines its eastern edge.
When the Basin and Range Province first formed, normal faulting
yielding a series of tilted, faultbounded blocks. The wedge-shaped
basins, or half-grabens, between these blocks quickly began to fill
with alluvium that had eroded off the blocks. Bajadas covering the
floor of the basins began lapping up the sides of the mountain ridges.
Eventually, only the crests of the mountains remained, and these
began to grow smaller because of scarp retreat and the formation
of pediment. The pediments themselves have slowly been covered by
alluvial fans. Thus, the ranges of the Basin and Range Province are
rows of inselbergs, and the basins are alluvium-filled half-grabens.
In some places, the centers of some of these basins have become playas
or salt lakes. Overall, the floor of the Basin and Range Province
lies low relative to its surroundings, so the province acts as an
interior basin that geographers refer to as the Great Basin.
The Basin and Range Province experiences desert-like conditions
because it not only lies in the rain shadow of the Sierra Nevada
Mountains, but much of it lies far from the sea.Though dry throughout,
variations in elevation and therefore temperature lead to major differences
in the appearance of the landscape and the life it hosts. Thus, different
portions of the desert are carpeted with scruffy, aromatic sagebrush.
Others consist of playa (salt lakes), bordered by alluvial fans.
Others are rocky landscapes dotted with a great variety of cacti
and other desert conditions and unreliable water sources, the province
presented a major obstacle to settlers heading to California. Only
with the construction of the transcontinental railroad did crossing
the Basin and Range Province become routine.
Other Feature Articles
in this chapter: 1 : 2 : 3 : 4
top of page  |
 |