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New research may have solved an American mystery which has baffled geologists for a century and a half: How did a river carve a path through a mountain in one of the country's most iconic landscapes? Scientists have long sought an answer to this question of how the Green River, the largest tributary of the Colorado River, managed to create a 700-meter-deep canyon through Utah's 4km-high Uinta Mountains instead of simply flowing around them. The question is particularly confounding because, while the Uinta Mountains are 50 million years old, the Green River has been following this route for less than 8 million years.
Now, researchers from universities in the U.K. and the U.S. have gathered persuasive evidence that a phenomenon called "lithospheric dripping," which causes mountains to subside and rebound over millions of years, is likely to be the cause of the Green River's unusual route.
In order to cut its surprising path through the Uinta Mountains, the Green River ran over land that was temporarily lowered when a lithospheric drip developed beneath the mountains several million years ago. During that time, the river eroded the mountain rock and established the channel it flows through today, including the famous Canyon of Lodore, which eventually linked it to the Colorado River.
Dr. Adam Smith, of the University of Glasgow's School of Geographical & Earth Sciences, is the lead author of the paper published in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface. He said, "The merging of the Green and Colorado Rivers millions of years ago altered the continental divide of North America. It created the line that separates the rivers that flow into the Pacific from those that flow into the Atlantic, and created new habitat boundaries for wildlife that influenced their evolution. It's an enormously significant area of the continent."
"For about 150 years now, geologists have debated over exactly how the rivers merged, which is a particularly challenging question for a tectonically inactive area where major geological events are rarer. We think that we've gathered enough evidence to show that lithospheric drip, which is still a relatively new concept in geology, is responsible for pulling the land down enough to enable the rivers to link and merge."
Lithospheric drips occur when dense, mineral-rich material forms at the base of the crust, eventually becoming heavy enough to sink into the mantle below. As they sink, they can drag down the land above them, pulling parts of mountain ranges downward.
When the drip breaks off and continues to sink on its own, the mountain range rebounds, leaving behind a distinctive "bullseye"-patterned zone of uplift across the landscape above the drip's point of origin.
In the new paper, the team show how they used a combination of seismic imaging and sophisticated data modeling to reach their conclusion. Seismic imaging is a process similar to a CT scan which helps scientists "see" below the planet's surface by collecting data on how seismic waves move and are reflected during earthquakes. Researchers from University College London, the University of Utah, and the Utah Geological Survey contributed to the research and co-authored the paper.
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