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Last modified
1/26/2010 10:12:48 AM
Creation date
10/5/2006 5:05:15 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Floodplain Documents
County
Statewide
Basin
Statewide
Title
Guidelines for Determining Flood Hazards on Alluvial Fans
Date
2/23/2000
Prepared By
FEMA
Floodplain - Doc Type
Educational/Technical/Reference Information
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<br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />I. <br />I. <br />'. <br />. <br />. <br />I. <br />'. <br />!. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br />. <br /> <br />- <br /> <br />7 <br /> <br />02/23/00 <br /> <br />3D Boundaries of an Alluvial Fan <br /> <br />Define the Toe and Lateral Boundaries of the Alluvial Fan. <br /> <br />3D (1) Toe <br /> <br />The distal terminus, or toe, of an alluvial fan commonly is defined by: <br /> <br />. A stream that intersects the fan and transports deposits away from the fan <br />. A playa lake <br />. An alluvial plain <br />. Smoother, gentler slopes of the piedmont plain <br /> <br />Such boundaries can often be identified on topographic maps by changes in contour lines or <br />identified on aerial photographs or by field inspection as changes in vegetation as a result of <br />sediment changes or increased water table depth. <br /> <br />3D (2) Lateral Boundaries <br /> <br />Lateral boundaries of alluvial fans are the edges of deposited and reworked alluvial materials. The <br />lateral boundary of a single alluvial fan typically is a trough, channel, or swale formed at the lateral <br />limits of deposition. The lateral boundary may also be a confining mountainside. <br /> <br />Lateral boundaries of single alluvial fans can often be identified as a contact of distinct differences <br />between light-colored, freshly abraded, alluvial deposits and darker-colored, weathered deposits with <br />well-developed soils on piedmont plains. Care should be taken to ensure that the contact is not <br />simply a divide between older and more recent deposits of the alluvial fan. <br /> <br />The lateral boundaries of alluvial fans that coalesce with adjacent alluvial fans are generally less <br />distinct than those of single alluvial fans. These lateral boundaries may be marked by a topographic <br />trough or ridge, It is sometimes possible to distinguish between surfaces of adjacent alluvial fans <br />based on different source-basin rock types. Defining the lateral boundaries of coalescing fans will <br />likely require additional fieldwork, use of surficial geologic and soils maps, and consultation with <br />a geomorphologist or soil scientist. <br /> <br />4 STAGE 2: DEFINING ACTIVE AND INACTIVE AREAS <br /> <br />Stage 1 identified whether the landform in question is an alluvial fan. Stage 2 seeks to delineate <br />areas of the alluvial fan that are active or are inactive in the deposition, erosion, and unstable flow <br />path flooding that builds alluvial fans, Stage 2 attempts to narrow the area of concern for Stage 3, <br />which is the specific identification of the extent of the IOO-year flood. <br />
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