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Denver,
Colorado and the Rocky Mountains
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In the next flyby, we leave the Great Plains abruptly as the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains rises dramatically from the gently sloping high plains. In the Denver area, much of this zone is taken up by steep-dipping sedimentary rocks that make a feature known as "hogbacks". Both a summer and a winter Landsat MSS full scene show the plains, the Front, and the high mountains of Colorado in the Denver area.
The boundary zone between
the Great Plains and the eastern Front of the Rocky Mountains is abrupt, with
the transition zone generally less than 1-2 km (0.6-1.2 miles) wide. The 700 km
wide scene taken by the Day-Vis channel on the Heat Capacity Mapping Mission (HCMM)
sensor shows much of the southern end of the Rockies from northern New Mexico
into the southern half of Wyoming. The map below it indicates that the entire
state of Colorado is included in the image.
In this part of the United
States the uplifted and folded rocks making up the true Rocky Mountains occupy
a relatively narrow strip passing through the central part of Colorado and New
Mexico, and swinging northwest through most of Wyoming (the Wind River Mtns
mark the shift that carries the Rockies into Idaho and Montana). The principal
units in Colorado are the Front Range and the Sawatch Range. This limited width
of the orogenic belt comprising the Rockies may seem a surprise because once
in these mountains, their lofty grandeur gives an impression that they extend
well to the west. In fact, from western Colorado into Utah, mountains of a different
type, found in the Colorado Plateau (next page), are predominant. The San Juan
Mountains look to the traveler much like the Rockies but they are actually a
great pile of highly dissected volcanic flow units intermixed with sedimentary
rocks and are considered a separate unit. Note the Uinta Mountains in Utah -
the only dominantly east-west mountain system in the U.S.
The Front is well displayed
by this perspective natural color image using Landsat 7 data merged with DEM topographic
data.The area shown are the high plains around Greeley, Colorado, with a reservoir
in the foothills near Fort Collins. The Rocky Mountain National Park is in the
background, near the snow-capped high mountains near Estes Park (nearby is Longs
Peak, which the writer [NMS] climbed while in college, rises to 14,255 feet, the
last thousand of which nearly did him in.)
This area is included in
this false color composite of central Colorado acquired soon after the launch
of Landsat 1.
These mountains form the eastern
edge of the North American Cordillera, which is made of groups of diverse, usually
complexly-folded and faulted blocks of crust. These blocks are uplifted or thrust
against other blocks separated by structural basins. They were deformed and emplaced
during periods of major orogenies that were often disconnected in time and place.
Rock units in the Rockies were finally compressed and shoved upwards about 65-70
million years ago. The present topography of these mountains is the result of
strong erosion thereafter that has lowered their original heights to under 4,420
meters (14,500 ft). Alpine glaciation has steepened and widened already deep valleys,
creating the rugged vistas that make this region especially popular for tourists
and skiers. The photo below shows a typical landscape within this part of the
Rocky Mountains.
The barren (whitish) area
along the crest of the Front Range in this image coincides with the Continental
Divide where it sits above the treeline. The slopes below are forested with
Douglas fir, spruce, pine, and aspen trees. Rocky Mountain National Park is
in the left center of the image. The southern end of the Medicine Bow Range
in Wyoming extends into the image at the top left.
Returning to the image, to
the right of the bluish downtown is a large square which is the Rocky Mountain
Arsenal, once used for storage of military weapons. This can be easily seen in
this 5 meter resolution Indian IRS-2 satellite subscene; note also the new International
Airport east of the city.
To Denver’s west, against
the mountains, are thin elongated strips with yellowish and brownish colors. These
strips are "hogbacks," which were steeply dipping sedimentary rocks, inclined
down to the east as the Front Range rocks were pushed upwards. Those hogbacks
with yellow tones are actually reddish (the Red Rocks Park contains them) but
have this color variant in the false-color mode. They are quite evident in this
aerial oblique view taken along the Front south of Denver.
Red colors within Denver
and around Boulder and Fort Collins signify trees and crops still bright in
the near-IR in this October scene. Their distribution is affected by proximity
to the Platte and other rivers. These rivers provide irrigation for the alfalfa,
hay, oats, corn, beets, and barley grown in this part of the Plains. Uncultivated
areas, such as the Pawnee Grasslands (brownish patch at the right center), contain
buffalo and grama grasses. A January 1973 winter view
of Denver places the region in a rather different perspective. One consequence
is the "heat island" effect of towns and cities, in which melting and snow-plot
removal cause the streets and roofs to appear very dark from the loss of the
snow cover. 6-9:
This winter scene brings out the infrastructure of much
of Denver. Four large towns are now visible to the north; name them. Are they
visible in the summer scene. Explain the brownish color associated with the
Rockies. Is there snow above the treeline? What factor(s) help(s) to indicate
drainage patterns. What happened to the lakes so visible in the summer image?
ANSWER
Nestled within the broad stretch
of the Rocky Mountains as they pass through northwestern Wyoming is America's
first National Park: Yellowstone. Here is a view from space:
Yellowstone is the site
of widespread volcanism erupting from now buried calderas. Activity has been
recent - the last eruptive flows were in the Pleistocene less than 1,000,000
years ago. Groundwater that seeps down to the still hot subsurface lavas is
responsible for the many geysers that are the trademark of this Park. Yellowstone
Lake occupies a darker area (evergreens) near the image center. The Absaroka
Mountains line the east side of the Park; these continue into the Beartooth
Mountains to their north. Look in this image about due west (left) of Yellowstone
Lake - this is how it appears in a Landsat-7 ETM+ subscene: grazing and clearcut
forests are to the left (west); fully preserved forestlands are on the right;
the sharp boundary is related to a fenceline (this effect is similar to the
U.S.-Canadian boundary shown on the previous page):
The next scene to the south
of Yellowstone contains some of the most spectacular scenery in America. Consider:
The Tetons are the up-down
range at top center. To their east are the E-W Gros Ventre Mountains (those
who know French should try to translate these name, given by French trappers
in the 18th century). The two curving ranges below are the Wyoming and Hoback
ranges. The beginning of the Snake River Plains (page 6-8) appear in the upper
left. The Tetons are hugely photogenic
(backdrop in the movie "Shane"). Here is a panoramic view from the alluvial
plains through which the Snake River flows":
For sentimental reasons,
the writer (who has done geological field work in all these ranges) includes
this last photo - the Tetons from Jenny Lake, where he and his wife spent their
honeymoon in 1961












