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0066 Explorations in Turkestan : Expedition of 1904 : vol.2
Explorations in Turkestan : Expedition of 1904 : vol.2 / Page 66 (Color Image)

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[Photo] 462 Vertical Section of Interlapping Loess and Alluvium in 100-foot Cliff of Obu-sinb Canal at Crossing of Road from Samarkand to Kudu Sufi.

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doi: 10.20676/00000178
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exposing red layers of laminated sandy clay, and doubtless range across the direc-
tion of prevalent wind, as there is a constancy of leeward overhanging sides.
Everywhere they are associated with heaps of sand derived from the silt, of which
all finer material has been drifted away, doubtless to settle as loess in grassy
mountain valleys. Anyhow, wherever the finer material is now, it has been
totally removed by the wind that excavated the trenches and left their sand
constituent behind. Another interesting feature is the frequency of large masses
of sand piled on top of these ridges, to occupy spaces of calm in the eddies of
windwork.

Proceeding still mountainwards, we soon find these trenches of deflation
floored by hard gravel-beds, and in the course of a few miles the silt deposit thins
out and dwindles into spits and iso-
lated areas on the gravel-plain, giving
it a mottled aspect as seen from a
distance—mottled only in shade and
texture, as both are red. This is
the transition from silt to gravel,
for in a short distance it is all one
vast expanse of gravel or cobbles
varying up to 4 or 5 inches in size.

Here, therefore, is record of two
significant changes of conditions suc-
ceeding each other—first, a moun-
tainward recession of alluviation
bringing its zone of fine deposits over
its more ancient zone of coarse de-
posits; second, a dissection of both
preceding zones by the channels now
occupied, moving alluviation again
to a zone farther out than before the
first change. It may be that the
first resulted from a decrease of
precipitation corresponding to that
extreme reaction which followed the
glacial period, as evidenced by moraine underlying the glaciers of Pamir. That
the second resulted from an increase of grade caused by an uptilting of the margins
of Tarim will be shown as we proceed.

Now we are perhaps 25 miles from the great sand, and our abandoned pied-
mont develops into a bad-land topography, an inclined table-land dissected into
a desert of red mountains rising ever higher above us as we ride slowly up the
bottom of a canyon. At first the canyon walls are built entirely of piedmont
conglomerates with here and there a layer 1 to 3 feet thick of silt, and all in slope
conforming to that of the plain above. Then towards the bottom of the wall
appears a surface beveling the tilted strata of a still more ancient piedmont series,