鸽子河悬停着,这对地质来说是个坏消息 (2020) (Alternatively, slightly more natural sounding:) 鸽子河处于不稳定状态,这对地质来说是不利的 (2020)
The Pigeon River Is Perched, Which Is Geologically Bad News (2020)

原始链接: https://princegeology.com/the-pigeon-river-is-perched-which-is-geologically-bad-news-for-it/

## 阿巴拉契亚山脉即将发生的河流夺取 一场地质事件——河流夺取——即将在北卡罗来纳州坎顿附近发生,那里霍米尼溪(法国宽河支流)的源头正在逼近皮根河。虽然“很快”在 geological 时间尺度上是相对的,但这次夺取被认为极有可能并且在 geological 上“迫在眉睫”。 皮根河谷比霍米尼溪谷高约 400 英尺,使其容易被更大的、地势较低的法国宽河系统夺取。分水岭非常微妙,仅高于皮根河 20 英尺,而霍米尼溪的源头距离皮根河只有 1,500 英尺。 证据表明,霍米尼溪一直在侵蚀进入皮根河系统,形成了一种不寻常的“抓钩”形排水模式,在这种模式下,支流似乎流向霍米尼溪,而不是远离它。这得益于基岩中的一个薄弱带,可能是一条断层,它允许快速侵蚀。 虽然无法确定这次夺取*何时*发生,但两条河流不同的地质和水流量——更大的法国宽河更擅长下切——表明皮根河越来越容易受到影响。虽然像大洪水这样的剧烈事件可能会启动这一过程,但河流夺取已经非常接近发生。

黑客新闻上的一个讨论强调了一种迷人的地质现象:北卡罗来纳州的鸽子河和霍米尼溪非常接近自然汇合——这种过程被称为河流夺水。目前,霍米尼溪流入法国宽河,但其海拔高度仅略高于附近的鸽子河。 如果这两条河流连通,水流可能会反转,水将改为流入鸽子河。用户推测,地下水位,甚至人类的建设(建筑物和混凝土工程)都可能加速这一过程。 原始文章可在princegeology.com上找到,其中详细介绍了这种岌岌可危的状况。一位评论员还提到了作者优秀的YouTube频道“TheGeoModels”,他在那里使用油漆工具以视觉方式解释地质概念。
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原文

A reader of the Nantahala Gorge post asked a very relevant question: Is there a stream capture in the Appalachians that is going to happen soon? While “soon” can be a very relative term in geology, there is most definitely a good answer to the question. At Canton, North Carolina, the headwaters of Hominy Creek, a French Broad River tributary, are VERY close to capturing the Pigeon River. In human terms, this is still probably a long way off, but it is most certainly geologically “imminent.”

Much like the Nantahala scenario, this is a capture between neighboring river valleys that are both part of the Tennessee River system. Today, their waters meet in the Tennessee Valley within 10’s of miles of the imminent capture point. Even so, the Pigeon River valley is “perched” (yes, a real geologic term) about 400 ft (125 m) higher than the neighboring Hominy Creek/French Broad valley in the area where the capture will occur. Because these neighboring rivers have strongly contrasting elevations, the lower river system (French Broad) has the potential to capture from the higher river system (Pigeon).

This capture is, geologically speaking, “inches” away from happening. The headwaters of Hominy Creek are about 1,500 ft (450 m) ground distance from the banks of the Pigeon River at the Evergreen Packaging paper mill. There is no dividing ridge between the two streams; the actual drainage divide is only about 20 ft (6 m) higher than the Pigeon itself, and it is so subtle as to be nearly invisible in the landscape.

Paper mill buildings are visible at the center of the image. The yellow line is the drainage divide between Hominy Creek and the Pigeon. I have not actually been to this spot, but I would be curious to see how discernible the features are due to development. Right now, the point where the railroad tops out and enters the mill is the leading edge of Hominy Creek’s attack.

It probably would not be too difficult to construct a canal to link the Pigeon and French Broad River systems through Hominy Creek. When the future stream capture creates this link, the introduction of the Pigeon’s flow across the 400 ft descent to the French Broad River valley will produce impressive rapids and falls and carve a deep gorge. Would-be engineers of the “Canton-Asheville Canal” would have to carefully control the water over this descent with dozens of locks and dams. Fortunately, Interstate 40 provides a much better means of traveling between the two river systems.

The headwaters of Hominy Creek show that it has been advancing into the Pigeon River system through the recent geologic past. Many stream networks develop “accordant junctions” between tributaries and the main stream, meaning that the angle between the tributary and main stream is well below 90 degrees on the upstream side of the junction. In other words, the layout of a stream system looks like a tree with branches, with the flow direction of the stream being from the tips of the branches towards the base of the trunk.

In the first panel, where the river systems are labeled, the “normal” branching patterns and flow directions are represented. As Hominy Creek eats its way into the Pigeon system, it inverts and reverses the normally branched stream network to make the odd drainage pattern. Peter Vogt called this pattern a “grapnel” shape in a paper in the 90s, and I used that term in my own subsequent work.

Upper Hominy Creek shows the opposite pattern. Two of its tributaries are angled as if they still flow to the Pigeon, but Hominy Creek now flows the opposite direction. These tributaries did indeed flow to a stream that once continued to the Pigeon. Hominy Creek’s “ancestor” ate its way into the elevated Pigeon Valley, carving right up the existing stream channel and progressively inverting it to flow towards the French Broad.

The inversion process is possible because Hominy Creek and the now-inverted Pigeon tributary flow down a very weak zone in the bedrock that is easily eroded. This weak zone is probably a fault or area of very intense fracturing of the rock, which makes it more susceptible to erosion and thus a good place for stream courses to localize.

The dark brown gash at center is the Hominy Creek gorge. It is oddly straight because it follows a planar weak zone in the bedrock. Interstate 40 follows Hominy Creek up to Canton, taking advantage of the slopes along this straight gorge.

Like many Appalachian stream captures, it is difficult to attribute this scenario to a specific geologic cause. Because the Pigeon and French Broad flow parallel to each other, are part of the same river system, and actually meet each other not too far from the future capture point, it is unlikely that they have experienced very different histories in terms of climate/precipitation or uplift of the land surface. What can be said for sure is that the French Broad is much larger, making it more capable of carving its valley down to match Tennessee Valley elevation, and it flows across notably different geology as it leaves the Blue Ridge.

The large-scale context of the future Pigeon capture is interesting. At the top of the image, you can see where the rivers are about to meet in the sedimentary rocks of the Tennessee Valley. This map area is about 55 miles (90 km) across. At this zoom, the higher elevation of the Pigeon system (the white area) is very apparent. The geology of this area is extremely complex, but the Pigeon crosses different rocks (greens) from the French Broad (yellows) as they exit the Blue Ridge near the top of the image. Geologic map by Thigpen and Hatcher (2009); citation linked here as I can’t find a live link to the full document.

The different rocks crossed by these rivers may indeed play a role in setting the stage for capture, just like in the Nantahala scenario. If the smaller Pigeon River also crosses harder rock in its lower reaches, it will be unable to keep pace with downcutting in the Tennessee Valley. The larger French Broad River, by contrast, has more water volume to attack less resistant rock, allowing it to keep pace with the Tennessee Valley. This scenario leaves the Pigeon stranded above the French Broad and susceptible to the capture that is going to occur.

No one can really say much about when this capture might occur, but it’s not time to sell property or charge up your camera to film it. While rates of landscape evolution in the Appalachians are intensely studied and hotly debated, it is safe to put this event in the “geologic” near future, which in human terms might still be a really long way off. Even so, this capture is extremely close to occurring, and I would not be surprised to know that land draining to the Pigeon on its surface loses groundwater into upper Hominy Creek today.

Additionally, it is interesting to consider the effects of something like a large recurrence interval flood on the Pigeon-Hominy Creek system. Were the Pigeon to rise massively out of its banks, perhaps by several feet, its waters would be lapping much closer to its divide with Hominy Creek, which rises only 20 ft (6 m) above the modern river level. To my knowledge, no recorded flood has produced this result, but it is not an unreasonable way to think about how the very first moments of the actual capture process could start. In Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley, a flood actually caused the North River to spill out of its banks and drain into neighboring Mossy Creek. I suppose this could be considered the beginning of the actual capture sequence between these two streams, which are small and whose confluence is close to the spillover point (a geologist wrote about this decades ago; his name escapes me). In the Pigeon’s case, I don’t think a spillover-causing flood is even remotely conceivable, but with a bit more advance by Hominy Creek and perhaps eastward migration of the Pigeon channel, repeated flood circumstances of this type might get the capture ball rolling in the geo-future.

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