Quick
Search: 
 
advanced search
 GSW Home    GeoRef Home    My GSW Alerts    Contact GSW    About GSW    Journals List    Help 
  Environmental and Engineering Geoscience   Email Content Delivery
JOURNAL HOME HELP CONTACT PUBLISHER SUBSCRIBE ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS

Environmental and Engineering Geoscience; February 2006; v. 12; no. 1; p. 13-24; DOI: 10.2113/12.1.13
© 2006 Association of Engineering Geologists
This Article
Right arrow Figures Only
Right arrow Full Text
Right arrow Full Text (PDF)
Right arrow Submit a response
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me when eLetters are posted
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Services
Right arrow Email this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in ISI Web of Science
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow reprints & permissions
Citing Articles
Right arrow Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by LUTTON, R. J.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
GeoRef
Right arrow GeoRef Citation

Past Valley Widening and Recent Creep beside the Lower Mississippi Valley

RICHARD J. LUTTON1

1 5 Crestwood Drive, Vicksburg, MS 39180

Tertiary strata are offset from the bluff at several places beside the broad valley of the Mississippi River in Mississippi.Most displaced blocks lie hidden under river water and floodplain, but the bluff at Vicksburg presents a partially exposed example. Block displacements there illustrate a mechanism of valley widening that operated before the geomorphic regime of the present. These displacements represent spreading of strata toward the valley in response to reductions of lateral confinement accompanying heavy river erosion nearby. Flat slip surfaces that developed in clayey strata during block displacements have facilitated recent movements as the meandering river impinged on the bluff. The foundations of two bridges at Vicksburg have experienced such creep-like movements in recent years. Localized plastic deformation has complicated the geologic picture near the bridges. Deformation features are confined to a single bed of marly limestone and the underlying layer of clayey marl. This plastically deformed couplet is contained within the much thicker assemblage of displaced blocks having horst-and-graben features. Plastic deformation of a bed that has subsequently been indurated to marly limestone indicates an origin well back in time, perhaps in the Oligocene. The structural fabric of the plastically deformed unit, however, indicates movement to the west and suggests some relation to the widening Pleistocene valley.

Key Words: Geomorphology • Foundations • Plastic Deformation • Landslide • Pleistocene • Tertiary







JOURNAL HOME HELP CONTACT PUBLISHER SUBSCRIBE ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
Copyright © 2008 by Association of Engineering Geologists