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The relationship of joints and stream drainage in flat-lying rocks of south-central New York and northern Pennsylvania.

Zeitschrift fur Geomorphologie
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Abstract

Streams whose courses are oblique to the joint directions (joint-oblique valleys) tend to erode easily owing to increased corrasion and subsequent undercutting at the upstream intersection of joints. Streams whose courses are parallel and perpendicular (joint-parallel valleys) to the nearly orthogonal joint sets erode by waterfall and plunge-pool formation. Most valleys in the Finger Lakes region are joint-oblique, although some well-developed valleys are joint-parallel. These joint-parallel valleys are usually due to 1) a single deep, pervasive joint whose presence acts as a barrier to lateral expansion of the stream, or 2) erosion along joint zones whose intense fracturing produces weak erosional resistance in the rocks. -from Author
Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title The relationship of joints and stream drainage in flat-lying rocks of south-central New York and northern Pennsylvania.
Series title Zeitschrift fur Geomorphologie
Volume 27
Issue 3
Year Published 1983
Language English
Larger Work Type Article
Larger Work Subtype Journal Article
Larger Work Title Zeitschrift fur Geomorphologie
First page 375
Last page 384
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