QUATERNARY SALT DISSOLUTION IN THE MOAB–SPANISH VALLEY, UT PLEISTOCENE AND HOLOCENE EVIDENCE
More than 123 m (405 ft) of fluvial gravels and sands have accumulated in the northern end of the MoabSpanish Valley (referred to as the Moab Valley) just west of the Colorado River, as shown in the boring log from Atlas Minerals ATP-1. These deposits rest on cap rock, the insoluble residue on top of the leached salt diaper formed by the Paradox Formation of Pennsylvanian age.
The Colorado River course across Moab Valley also suggests on-going salt dissolution. The river enters the valley at a high paradoxical angle before flowing across the valley axis and reversing direction as it crosses the proposed main dissolution area. The Moab Wash tributary from the west becomes a braided channel forming a delta as it enters a sink in the valley prior to joining the Colorado River.
Terraces are conspicuously missing from the center of Moab Valley although gravel strath terraces exist along the Colorado River both upstream and downstream of the valley. Terrace absence from the valley interior is hypothesized to be caused by subsidence and burial of alluvial material. Formation of downstream terraces require transport and aggradation of a gravel bed load through the valley, however changes in the sediment source could also explain these observations. Terraces exist at two elevations immediately after the Colorado River exits Moab Valley at The Portal, suggesting that dissolution and subsidence have been episodic. Pedogenic carbonate accumulation in the upper terrace indicates a middle Pleistocene age of 380 ky.