Iowan erosion surface

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The Iowan Erosion Surface (IES) is a

geographic region located mostly in northeastern Iowa and extends into southeastern Minnesota.[1]

History of IES analysis

The IES has been a center of controversy for

topographic relief and other elements.[2]

Early workers proposed the notion that the surface was a

Geological history

Most of the region is underlain by

Late Wisconsinan aged loess covers the in some places. The relief of the IES itself is generally flat with broad, peculiar interfluves sitting atop of it. The broad elliptical interfluves are commonly referred to as paha and are oriented in a NW-SE (northwest to southeast) direction while each paha is generally isolated or at a distance from one another on the IES.[5] The NW-SE orientation is attributed to Pleistocene-era oriented snowdunes that melted over the permafrost
table, which then eroded and formed oriented depressions in the terrain. This was followed by episodic blankets of paleo-snow and its snowmelt to wear back the rim or scarp of the depressions which resulted in the broad, leveled, erosional plain called the Iowan Erosion Surface.[6]

References

Inline citations

  1. ^ Prior, 1991
  2. ^ a b Ruhe et al., 1968
  3. ^ Kay, G (1929). "The relative ages of the Iowan and Illinoian drift sheets". American Journal of Science. 16: 497–518.
  4. .
  5. ^ Iannicelli, M. (2010). "Evolution of the Driftless Area and contiguous regions of midwestern USA through Pleistocene periglacial processes." The Open Geology Journal, vol. 4, pp. 35 – 54.
  6. ^ Iannicelli, M. (2010). "Evolution of the Driftless Area and contiguous regions of midwestern USA through Pleistocene periglacial processes." The Open Geology Journal, vol. 4, pp. 35 – 54.

Sources

  • Hallberg, G., Fenton, T.E., Miller, G.A., Luteneggar, A.J. (1978), The Iowan Erosion Surface, an important lesson and some new wrinkles. In, "Geology of East-Central Iowa", R.R. Anderson (ed.), Iowa Geological Survey,42nd Annual Tri-State Geological Field Conference, Guidebook, pp. 2.2–2.94.
  • Iannicelli, M. (2010). Evolution of the Driftless Area and contiguous regions of midwestern USA through Pleistocene periglacial processes. The Open Geology Journal, vol. 4, pp. 35 – 54.
  • Prior, J.C. (1991), Landforms of Iowa. University of Iowa Press, Iowa City, 153 pp.
  • Ruhe, R.V., Dietz, W.P., Fenton, T.E., Hall, G.F. (1968), Iowan Drift problem, northeastern Iowa. Iowa Geological Survey, Report of Investigations, v. 7, 40 pp.