REPORT OF COMMISSION VII
GVII-91
ders melting, wavering, advancing, retreating.
If by some cataclysm sharp lines of demarca
tion are drawn, she straightway begins to blur
them by creating intermediate forms, and thus
establishes the boundary zone which character
izes the inanimate and animate world.”
In these broad zones of transition
terrain characteristic of one area fre
quently interlocks like a jigsaw puzzle with
terrain characteristic of another. The
interpreter who tries to analyze a photo
near one of these boundaries is very likely
to find in his photos an outlier or protrud
ing tongue of another area which is much
different from that described for this loca
tion. As a result the inexperienced inter-
(10). Since each major land type has its
own associations and ground conditions,
the key is forced to spell out the conditions
found on each land type within the sub
division, a situation involving voluminous
repetition from one subdivision to another,
or to give vague generalizations. The latter
alternative is the natural choice. To over
come this objection the physiographer
can continue to subdivide his land units
until he reaches a unit which is homo
geneous. If he should attempt to sub
divide the Navajo Section into homo
geneous units, he would find he had per
haps 10 uplifted mountain areas, on which
the associations were essentially the same,
/\Jluvial Ptqin
Photo sr2\
tocabon\ \
-boundary at chorogrqpbic. See?/es
/—boundary at topograph* Scales
/ Erosionq! Plain
Fig. 2.—Two boundary lines represent the same topo
graphic change at different scales. The smooth line is an
average location which may be inaccurate at any given
point if examined at a topographic scale. Here a photo falls
within an erosional plain, but the regional map tells the
interpreter that it is on an alluvial plain.
prefer submits a false report, and the
experienced man discovers his mistake, but
makes a mental reservation regarding the
value of the key. Figure 2 illustrates the
problem.
2. The greatest disadvantage of physio
graphic subdivision is the lack of homo
geneity within any large area such as one of
Fenneman’s subdivisions. Any subdivision
of the earth which does not follow generic
land form lines has many terrain conditions
within it. Definite ground conditions and
associations cannot be described and only
broad generalizations can be given. Nor
can deductive methods for making an exact
interpretation be outlined, like those de
scribed by the author in a previous paper
and perhaps 100 high plateaus with similar
associations. This would give him far too
much repetition, and he would be forced to
describe the typical situation. In other
words, there is apparently no compromise
between “too large” and “too small”
which does not involve voluminous repeti
tion, unless one resorts to types.
However, there are some regions where
topographic changes are relatively minor
and the land surface is relatively uniform,
as in a level desert region, where dominant
control shifts from topography to climate
and water supply. In such cases the use of
physiographic subdivisions should be con
sidered.
(continued on page 101)