Abstract
By comparing the topographic contour map, the Bajocian limestone structural contour map and alluvial terraces in the Toul and Nancy area, it is possible to reconstitute the changes in the drainage pattern and the Moselle and Meuse cuestas (côtes de Moselle et de Meuse) retreat that have taken place since the late Tertiary. The highest reworked alluvial deposits of the palaeo-rivers (‘Haute-Moselle’ and ‘Paléo-Meurthe’), are now situated on the inverted relief top of the Moselle cuesta. They suggest that the course of these rivers drifted and that the relief in the late Tertiary was subdued. The clearing of the back slope surfaces only started at the beginning of the Pleistocene (at 350 m) as a result of a climatic deterioration. Since this time, downcutting erosion and the correlative removal of clays have strongly emphasized cuesta relief although there has been a certain retreat which varies about 6 to 21 km, depending on the basement dip. The main rivers are almost entirely superimposed on the palaeo structural frame-work. On the contrary the tributaries of the left bank originally extended and changed on the Callovo-Oxfordian clays before penetrating into the Bajocian limestones, according to the cuestas retreat during the Plio-Pleistocene. Only small strike rivers were in accordance with structural features; sinking into the underlaying Bajocian limestones these entrenched rivers quickly dried up. On the opposite, the flow of the eastward rivers, independent of the structure, grew upstream to downstream, because these rivers first drained the Callovo-Oxfordian clays, before cutting across the Bajocian limestones groundwater. It is the same nowadays. The piracy of the Moselle can be explained by the evolution of the ‘Paléo-Terrouin’, a major eastward palaeo tributary of the ‘Paléo-Meurthe’, and by the retreat of the Meuse cuesta. The significant retreat of this cuesta in the ‘Toul syncline’, changing from an inverted relief to a structural relief in the Dieulouard structural basin, led to a widening of the Callovo-Oxfordian clay plain and a broadening of the ‘Paléo-Terrouin’ 's hydrographic basin. As a result, the ‘Paléo-Terrouin’ captured the ‘Rivière de la Haie Plaisante’, a small strike tributary of the Upper Moselle, and then eastward, the Upper Moselle. In the future, it will probably also capture the Upper Meuse.
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