Earth fissures in the Stewart area of the Willcox Basin, Cochise County, Arizona

Large amounts of ground water have been pumped from alluvial deposits in southern Arizona basins since the late 1940's. Significant declines of ground-water levels have occurred in some of the basins. Ground subsidence and earth fissures, believed to be related to the large declines, have been...

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Main Author: Anderson, Steven Robert.
Other Authors: Davis, Stanley N.
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 1979
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191680
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1916802015-10-23T04:37:37Z Earth fissures in the Stewart area of the Willcox Basin, Cochise County, Arizona Anderson, Steven Robert. Davis, Stanley N. Simpson, Eugene S. Schreiber, Jr., Joseph F. Large amounts of ground water have been pumped from alluvial deposits in southern Arizona basins since the late 1940's. Significant declines of ground-water levels have occurred in some of the basins. Ground subsidence and earth fissures, believed to be related to the large declines, have been observed. Striking examples of the earth fissuring phenomenon occur in the Stewart area of the Willcox basin. Water levels have declined more than 100 ft (30.5 m) in the past 30 years due to agricultural pumping. Subsidence of 1 to 2 in (3.3 to 6.6 ft) has been recorded near the area of maximum water-level decline. Earth fissures associated with the water-level declines and subsidence have appeared at the basin floor margins near the Winchester Mountains, the Circle I Hills, and the Spike E Hills. The fissures occur in areas where alluvial sediments come into contact with Pleistocene lacustrine clays. Dense mesquite forests, with some unusually large members (some of which seem to be dying), commonly mark the boundaries. Two types of fissure patterns, semipolygonal to polygonal and semicurved to linear, are found intermixed in the Stewart area. The fissures in polygonal patterns appear narrower and shallower than linear fissures. The polygonal patterns suggest that some fissures may be due to horizontal contraction of clayey sediments. Some linear fissures may be the result of differential subsidence. 1979 Thesis-Reproduction (electronic) text http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191680 212833490 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description Large amounts of ground water have been pumped from alluvial deposits in southern Arizona basins since the late 1940's. Significant declines of ground-water levels have occurred in some of the basins. Ground subsidence and earth fissures, believed to be related to the large declines, have been observed. Striking examples of the earth fissuring phenomenon occur in the Stewart area of the Willcox basin. Water levels have declined more than 100 ft (30.5 m) in the past 30 years due to agricultural pumping. Subsidence of 1 to 2 in (3.3 to 6.6 ft) has been recorded near the area of maximum water-level decline. Earth fissures associated with the water-level declines and subsidence have appeared at the basin floor margins near the Winchester Mountains, the Circle I Hills, and the Spike E Hills. The fissures occur in areas where alluvial sediments come into contact with Pleistocene lacustrine clays. Dense mesquite forests, with some unusually large members (some of which seem to be dying), commonly mark the boundaries. Two types of fissure patterns, semipolygonal to polygonal and semicurved to linear, are found intermixed in the Stewart area. The fissures in polygonal patterns appear narrower and shallower than linear fissures. The polygonal patterns suggest that some fissures may be due to horizontal contraction of clayey sediments. Some linear fissures may be the result of differential subsidence.
author2 Davis, Stanley N.
author_facet Davis, Stanley N.
Anderson, Steven Robert.
author Anderson, Steven Robert.
spellingShingle Anderson, Steven Robert.
Earth fissures in the Stewart area of the Willcox Basin, Cochise County, Arizona
author_sort Anderson, Steven Robert.
title Earth fissures in the Stewart area of the Willcox Basin, Cochise County, Arizona
title_short Earth fissures in the Stewart area of the Willcox Basin, Cochise County, Arizona
title_full Earth fissures in the Stewart area of the Willcox Basin, Cochise County, Arizona
title_fullStr Earth fissures in the Stewart area of the Willcox Basin, Cochise County, Arizona
title_full_unstemmed Earth fissures in the Stewart area of the Willcox Basin, Cochise County, Arizona
title_sort earth fissures in the stewart area of the willcox basin, cochise county, arizona
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 1979
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191680
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