EVIDENCE FOR A LARGE-SCALE PALEOFLOOD IN THE NORTHEASTERN UINTA MOUNTAINS
The proposed mechanism for this flood is the failure of a landslide dam that temporarily impounded the Green River. Approximately 3 km upstream from the first appearance of the flood deposit, a landslide scarp is clearly visible in the UMG, and beneath it a black shale bed outcrops along the Green River. The landslide was likely initiated by the Green River as it undercut the shale. Further evidence for an impounded Green River exists upstream in a deposit at Little Hole. This deposit was formerly mapped as the Browns Park formation (Tbp), a Tertiary basin fill, but it is outwardly different than the Tbp exposed downstream. A new interpretation for this deposit is that it is a fill that accumulated in the slackwater behind the dam. It is a 60 m thick, cross bedded to massive sand with channel forms containing clasts derived from the adjacent local catchments. Within the upper 4 m it coarsens upward to well-rounded pebble gravel. The timing of the flood is likely mid-Pleistocene, and the duration of the impoundment is unknown.