While the ice responded to topography, and in a large measure was controlled by the physical features of the range, yet at the same time it was modifying the forms encountered, changing the shape of the great canyons, and building new forms. Before the... The Journal of Geology - Page 792edited by - 1907Full view - About this book
| American Geographical Society of New York - 1909 - 902 pages
...topography and in large measure was controlled by the physical features of the range, yet at the same time it was modifying the forms encountered, changing...the Uinta Mountains, the heads of the great canyons, it may be fairly assumed, were narrow V-shaped notches, most of which reached nearly to the crest line... | |
| Wallace Walter Atwood - 1903 - 100 pages
...topography and in large measure was controlled by the physical features of the range, yet at the same time it was modifying the forms encountered, changing...the Uinta Mountains the heads of the great canyons, it may be fairly assumed, were narrow V-shaped notches, most of which reached nearly to the crest line... | |
| Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin - 1907 - 1104 pages
...topography, and in a large measure was controlled by the physical features of the range, yet at the same time it was modifying the forms encountered, changing...V-shaped notches, reaching in most cases nearly to the crest-line of the range. The first ice was formed in these narrow canyon heads, and the earliest movement... | |
| Wallace Walter Atwood - 1909 - 142 pages
...topography and in large measure, was controlled by the physical features of the range, yet at the same time it was modifying the forms encountered, changing...the Uinta Mountains the heads of the great canyons, it may be fairly assumed, were narrow V-shaped notches, most of which reached nearly to the crest line... | |
| Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin - 1907 - 886 pages
...topography, and in a large measure was controlled by the physical features of the range, yet at the same time it was modifying the forms encountered, changing...V-shaped notches, reaching in most cases nearly to the crest-line of the range. The first ice was formed in these narrow canyon heads, and the earliest movement... | |
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