Abstract

Northeast Nebraska barbed tributaries include north-oriented streams flowing to the south-oriented Missouri River and south-oriented streams flowing to the north-oriented Missouri River tributaries. Detailed topographic maps were used to determine how these northeast Nebraska drainage routes originated. A giant south-oriented supra-glacial melt water river is interpreted to have sliced an ice-walled and bedrock-floored canyon into a decaying ice sheet’s surface where eastern South Dakota’s east-facing Missouri Escarpment and west-facing Prairie Coteau escarpment are now located and to have flowed from that canyon’s mouth across northeast Nebraska while South Dakota’s north-facing Pine Ridge Escarpment is interpreted to be the south wall of a large east-oriented valley that was eroded headward across immense southeast-oriented ice-marginal melt water floods which had originally flowed across northeast Nebraska. Prior to Missouri River valley headward erosion these two different immense melt water floods created and then flowed across a low relief and low gradient northeast Nebraska topographic surface. Present day northeast Nebraska topography developed when the deep south-oriented Missouri River valley and its south-oriented tributary valleys eroded headward into this low relief and low gradient topographic surface. As the deep Missouri River valley eroded headward it beheaded shallow south-oriented flood flow channels supplying water to new and actively eroding south-oriented Missouri River tributary valleys and water on north ends of the beheaded channels reversed flow direction to move toward the much deeper Missouri River valley. Water still moving in south directions adjacent to these reversed flow channels was then captured leading to development of south-oriented tributaries to the north-oriented streams.

Highlights

  • The Missouri River flows in an east, southeast, and south direction around the Nebraska northeast corner

  • The south-oriented James River originates in central North Dakota and after flowing in an east direction turns to flow in a south direction into and across eastern South Dakota before reaching the much larger Missouri River

  • In eastern South Dakota the south-oriented James River flows on a lowland floor located between the east-facing Missouri Escarpment and the west-facing escarpment bounding the Prairie Coteau upland

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Summary

Introduction

The Missouri River flows in an east, southeast, and south direction around the Nebraska northeast corner (see figure 1). Northeast Nebraska is directly to the south of where the south-oriented James River joins the east-, southeast-, and south-oriented Missouri River. Downstream from the James River the Missouri River flows in a much wider valley than in the upstream region. In eastern South Dakota the south-oriented James River flows on a lowland floor located between the east-facing Missouri Escarpment and the west-facing escarpment bounding the Prairie Coteau upland. In addition South Dakota’s north-facing Pine Ridge Escarpment is located to the west of where the James River joins the Missouri River. If any, exists between northeast Nebraska’s barbed tributaries, the wider Missouri River valley downstream from the James River, the South Dakota escarpments, and South Dakota’s collapsed or stagnation moraine regions?

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