Plate 12.—If the interpreter has discovered a basin type in his photos he turns to this page
and verifies this determination by first checking the recognition features. Then he gets very specific
information on what to expect in his photos and how to deduce what activities are taking place.
COLORADO PLATEAU
BASIN TYPE
RECOGNITION FEATURES
1. Vide valleys, nearly level, with gently sloping valley
sides.
2. Deep gully erosion frequent.
3. Vegetation usually low brush or sparse weeds, occasion
ally covered by open woodland, frequently barren.
VARIATIONS
1. Upper basins under scarps of plateaus, 6,000 - 7,000 ft.
2. Lower valleys of rivers, 5,000 - 6,000 ft.
3. Deserts in lowest valleys, 4,000 - 5,000 ft.
ASSOCIATIONS
Climate - semi-desert. Light scattered electrical storms
from July through September with occasional heavy downpours.
Dust storms in spring. Light snow does not remain after
winter storms. Annual precipitation 5" - 15".
Soils - mostly alkaline clays. Composed of weathered sand
stone, shale and limestone materials washed down from plat
eaus, forming deep sandy clay deposits. Alkali excessive
in basins without good drainage, making soils infertile and
water bad. Much coarse alluvium deposited in dry washes.
Sheet and gully erosion frequently severe. Soils very
slick when wet. Clays used to make adobe bricks.
water Supply - dependent on deep wells, reservoirs, earth
tanks and cisterns. Minor drainage channels are dry washes
during most of year, fcith water flowing only after summer
storms. Rivers usually aggraded with silt and coarse alluvium.
Vegetation - cover of sagebrush frequently found in upper
basins. Open woodlands of plnon-juniper occasionally found
on edges of upper basins. Lower basins have bitterbrush and
shadscale brush on alaaline areas, and a sparse cover of
weeds elsewhere. Used as winter range for cattle and sheep.
Some areas being reseeded with range grasses or unirrigated
crops. Frequently large areas are barren.
Culture - agriculture usually irrigated. Some dry farming,
in upper basins, raising small grains and beans. Some large
commercial irrigation, depending on reservoirs. Large set
tlements occur at road and rail junctions, or in irrigated
valleys. Many fcanch headquarters and small towns also found.
Some small wood-using industries depending on plateaus for
raw material. Some oil wells, natural gas wells and pipe
lines. Uranium processing plants springing up.
Transportation - Main paved roads and railroads use this
terrain type principally. Cattle shipping points found
along rail lines. Vide "dips" required in roads to allow
passage of flash floods. Flash floods disrupt travel on
minor roads in summer.
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MIMING
Fig. 2.11 The basin type. This basin at 6,500 ft. elev.
is filled with weathered rock waste from receding escarp
ments around it, which ranges from adobe clay on the flats
to coarse alluvium in the dry washes. The basin is irrig
ated by trapping summer rainfall behind a dam at the left,
but it can only supply part of the water needs, and dry-
farming is being attempted at the right. In the lower
center is Zuni Pueblo made up of adobe clay houses. The
Zunis are a progressive tribe and have been peaceful agri
culturalists for generations. The basins are the favored
sites for road locations in much of this region. New
Mexico. December 1948.
GVII-96 PHOTOGRAMMETRIC ENGINEERING