Geofísica Internacional (Oct 2004)

Late Quaternary evolution of alluvial fans in the Playa, El Fresnal region, northern Chihuahua desert, Mexico: Palaeoclimatic implications

  • J. Medina-Sánchez,
  • C. A. Mortera-Gutiérrez,
  • J. Urrutia Fucugauchi,
  • A. Valiente-Banuet,
  • W. Bandy,
  • J. M. Maillol,
  • J. Ortega-Ramírez,
  • G. J. Chacón-Cruz

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 3
pp. 445 – 466

Abstract

Read online

The Playa El Fresnal area is a tilted terrane characteristic of an extensional basin. It is a half graben/tilted-block system with a playa-lake on the basin floor flanked by piedmonts covered by alluvial fans. Structural heterogeneities within normal fault zones influenced the geomorphic expression of the uplifted footwall blocks of associated volcanism, and the downdropped hanging wall. The footwall area is the main sediment source, but the hanging wall-derived sediments are more extensive. The ancient alluvial fans are in the distal part, whereas the hanging-wall sediments are located in the apex area.A geomorphic analysis of the relative topographic position of the alluvial fans, degree of dissection of the original surfaces, general sedimentology (facies description), and stream channel network type, highlights the importance of climatic change in interpreting alluvial-fan surfaces. Three generations of alluvial fans were identified on the footwall and hanging wall slopes. They were formed during the late Quaternary climatic shift, consistent with the main climatic changes recorded in the paleolake stratigraphy of northern Mexico and the American Southwest. These alluvial fans consist mainly of debris-flow deposits from flash floods, probably triggered by a change from relatively moist to arid conditions. They contrast with the typically lower-flow-regime of thick-bedded, cross-bedded, and lenticular channel facies, and associated floodplain sequences of rivers.

Keywords