Abstract

The United States Supreme Court settled legal disputes concerning four different Larimer County (Colorado) locations where water is moved by gravity across the high elevation North Platte-South Platte River drainage divide, which begins as a triple drainage divide with the Colorado River at Thunder Mountain (on the east-west continental divide and near Colorado River headwaters) and proceeds in roughly a north and northeast direction across deep mountain passes and other low points (divide crossings) first as the Michigan River (in the North Platte watershed)-Cache la Poudre River (in the South Platte watershed) drainage divide and then as the Laramie River (in the North Platte watershed)-Cache la Poudre River drainage divide. The mountain passes and nearby valley and drainage route orientations and other unusual erosional features can be explained if enormous and prolonged volumes of south-oriented water moved along today’s north-oriented North Platte and Laramie River alignments into what must have been a rising mountain region to reach south-oriented Colorado River headwaters. Mountain uplift in time forced a flow reversal in the Laramie River valley while flow continued in a south direction along the North Platte River alignment only to be forced to flow around the Medicine Bow Mountains south end and then to flow northward in the Laramie River valley and later to be captured by headward erosion of the east-oriented Cache la Poudre River-Joe Wright Creek valley (aided by a steeper gradient and less resistant bedrock). Continued uplift next reversed flow on the North Platte River alignment to create drainage routes seen today. While explaining Larimer County North Platte-South Platte drainage divide area topographic map drainage system and erosional landform evidence this interpretation requires a completely different Cenozoic history than the geologic history geologists usually describe.

Highlights

  • 1.1 Statement of the ProblemThe United States Supreme Court settled two legal disputes over the movement of water by gravity across the Larimer County (Colorado) North Platte-South Platte River drainage divide, yet the published geomorphology literature does not explain how that hard fought-over drainage divide came to be

  • The North Platte-South Platte drainage divide begins at Thunder Mountain where a triple drainage divide marks the boundary between the North Platte drainage basin in Jackson County, South Platte drainage basin in Larimer County, and Colorado River drainage basin in Grand County

  • North of Thunder Mountain is Iron Mountain and an unnamed pass between the two peaks links the west-oriented Michigan River (M, which flows to the North Platte) with southeast-oriented Neota Creek, which flows to northeast-oriented La Poudre Creek

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Summary

Introduction

1.1 Statement of the ProblemThe United States Supreme Court settled two legal disputes over the movement of water by gravity across the Larimer County (Colorado) North Platte-South Platte River drainage divide, yet the published geomorphology literature does not explain how that hard fought-over drainage divide came to be. The North and South Platte Rivers today originate on either side of the south- and southwest-oriented Colorado River headwaters (flowing to the Pacific Ocean) and flow along completely different and divergent routes before eventually joining in western Nebraska to form the east-oriented Platte River (which joins the Missouri River with its water eventually reaching the Gulf of Mexico). The United States Geological Survey (USGS) has published detailed topographic maps on which all evidence needed to interpret drainage divide origins is shown, yet when topographic map interpretation techniques are used drainage divide origins obtained are not consistent with accepted regional geologic histories. Those regional geologic histories were developed by following accepted Cenozoic history paradigm rules and http://esr.ccsenet.org

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