(Redirected from U-shaped valley):''This article is about the physical-geographic term. For places named "Valley" see
Valley (disambiguation).''
In '
geology', a 'valley' is a
depression with predominant extent in one direction. A very deep river valley may be called a '
canyon' or 'gorge'.
The terms
U-shaped and V-shaped are descriptive terms of
geography to characterize the form of valleys. Most valleys belong to one of these two main types or a mixture of them, at least with respect of the
cross section of the slopes or hillsides.
River valleys

Schematic cross section of a typical valley in the
Eastern Alps. The shoulders of U or V valleys are often located roughly ''halfway up'' the slopes
A valley formed by
flowing water, or ''river valley'', is usually V-shaped. The exact shape will depend on the characteristics of the stream flowing through it. Rivers with steep gradients, as in
mountain ranges, produce steep walls and a narrow bottom. Shallower slopes may produce broader and gentler valleys, but in the lowest stretch of a river, where it approaches its
base level, it begins to deposit sediment and the valley bottom becomes a
floodplain.
A V-shaped valley is formed by
downcutting when the flowing stream erodes its channel at a higher rate than the sides are eroded. The resulting landform is a narrow canyon with fast water and little bank (
floodplain) on the river sides.
Some broad ''V'' examples are:
★ USA:
Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park, and others in
Grand Canyon NP
★ Alpine Europe:
★
★ Austria: narrow passages of upper
Inn valley (Inntal), affluents of
Enns a.s.o
★
★ Switzerland:
Napf region, Zurich Oberland,
Engadin
★
★ Germany: affluents to the middle reaches of
Rhine and
Mosel
Glacial valleys
A valley carved by
glaciers, or ''glacial valley'', is normally U-shaped. If we can see the valley, it means the glacier that formed it is no longer there. When the ice recedes or thaws, the valley remains, often littered with small boulders that were transported within the ice. Floor gradient does not affect the valley's shape, it is the glacier's size that does. Continuously flowing glaciers - espec. in the
ice age - and large sized glaciers carve wide, deep incised valleys.
Examples of U-shaped valleys are found in every mountainous region that has experienced
glaciation, usually during the
Pleistocene ice ages.
Most present U-shaped valleys started as V-shaped before glaciation. The glaciers carved it out wider and deeper, simultaneously changing the shape. This proceeds through the glacial erosion processes of
(glaciation) and
abrasion, which results in large rocky material (glacial till) being carried in the glacier. A material called boulder clay is deposited on the floor of the valley. As the ice melts and retreats, the valley is left with very steep sides and a wide, flat floor. A
river or
stream may remain in the valley. This replaces the original stream or river and is known as a
misfit stream because it is smaller than one would expect given the size of its valley.
Other interesting glacially-carved valleys are the
★
Side valleys of the Austrian river
Salzach for their parallel directions and hanging mouths.
★ Some Scottish glens full with bushes and flowers.
★ That of the
St. Mary River in
Glacier National Park in
Montana, USA.
Transition forms and valley shoulders

Look from Paria View to a valley in
Bryce Canyon/Utah with very striking shoulders
Depending on the
topography, the
rock types and the
climate, a lot of transition forms between V-, U- and plain valleys exist. Their bottoms can be broad or narrow, but characteristic is also the type of valley shoulder. The broader a mountain valley, the lower its shoulders are located in most cases. An important exception are
canyons where the shoulder almost is near the top of the valley's slope. In the Alps - e.g. the
Tyrolean
Inn valley - the shoulders are quite low (100-200 meters above the bottom). Many
villages are located here (esp. at the sunny side) because the
climate is very mild: even in winter when the valley's floor is completely filled with fog, these villages are in
sunshine.
In some stress-tectonic regions of the
Rockies or the Alps (e.g.
Salzburg) the
side valleys are parallel to each other, and additionally they are
hanging. The brooks flow into the
river in form of deep
gorges or
waterfalls. Usually this fact is the result of a violent erosion of the former valley shoulders. A special genesis we find also at
arêtes and glacial
cirques, at every Scottish glen, or a northern
fjord.
Hanging valleys
A 'hanging valley' is a
tributary valley with the floor at a higher relief than the main channel into which it flows. They are most commonly associated with U-shaped valleys when a tributary
glacier flows into a glacier of larger volume. The main glacier erodes a deep U-shaped valley with nearly vertical sides while the tributary glacier, with a smaller volume of ice, makes a shallower U-shaped valley. Since the surfaces of the glaciers were originally at the same
elevation, the shallower valley appears to be ‘hanging’ above the main valley. Often,
waterfalls form at or near the outlet of the upper valley.
[1]
Valley floors
Usually the bottom of a main valley is broad - independent of the U or V shape. It typically ranges from about one to ten kilometres in width and is commonly filled with mountain
sediments. The shape of the floor can be rather
horizontal, similar to a flat
cylinder, or
terraced.
Side valleys are rather V than U-shaped; near the mouth
clammies are possible if it is a
hanging valley. The location of the
villages depends on the across-valley profile, on
climate and local traditions, and on the danger of
avalanches or
landslides. Predominant are places on terraces or
alluvial fans if they exist.
Historic siting of villages within the
mainstem valleys, however, have chiefly considered the potential of
flooding.
Hollows
A 'hollow' is a small valley or dry
stream bed. This term is commonly used in
New England,
Arkansas,
Missouri and
Pennsylvania to describe such geographic features. Also used in
Southern Appalachia, but pronounced "holler." Hollows may be formed by
river valleys such as
Mansfield Hollow or they may be relatively dry clefts with a notch-like characteristic in that they have a height of land and consequent
water divide in their bases. A hollow such as this is
Boston Hollow. Tourists in Europe can further visit a lot of
karst,
stalactite and
ice hollows (e.g. in
Slovenia and
Austria).
Famous valleys
★
California Central Valley (United States)
★
Copper Canyon
★
Danube Valley (Eastern Europe,
Wachau,
Iron Gate)
★
Death Valley (United States)
★
Glen Coe (Scotland)
★
Grand Canyon (United States)
★
Great Glen (Scotland)
★
Great Rift Valley (from Jordan to the
Red Sea and
Lake Victoria)
★
Indus Valley (Pakistan)
★
Loire Valley with its famous
castles (France)
★
Napa Valley (United States)
★
Okanagan Valley (Canada)
★ Upper
Rhine Valley (an old
graben system) (France)
★
Rhone Valley from the
Matterhorn to Grenoble and
Lyon (France)
★
Rio Grande Valley (United States)
★
Shenandoah Valley (United States)
★
Sonoma Valley,
California,
USA
★
Valley of the Kings (Egypt)
★
Valley of the Sun (Phoenix, Az, US)
★
San Fernando Valley (United States)
★
Santa Clara Valley, perhaps better known as "
Silicon Valley" (United States)
★
South Wales Valleys (Wales)
★
Valley of Mexico (Mexico), also known as "El Valle de México" see
Mexico city
Rift valleys
Main articles: Rift valley
'Rift valleys', such as the
Great Rift Valley, are formed by the expansion of the
Earth's crust due to
tectonic activity beneath the Earth's surface.
Extraterrestrial valleys
The other
terrestrial planets and the
moons of our Solar System can also have valley-like features.
Lunar valleys can be formed from a linked chain of
impact craters. Smaller valleys, known as
rilles, may have originated from
lava flows or from the contractions of cooling lava sheets.
Besides the lunar
craters, the details of lunar mountain ranges have been well known for more than 300 years (e.g.
J.H. Schröter's ''Selenotopographische Fragmente'' of
1791). A lot of linear phenomena like
Rheita or Schröter valley and the famous '
Vallis Alpes' (see also below) were observed with details less than 1 km (which corresponds to a coin seen from 5-10 km distance)—but the geological genesis was debated until the
Apollo 11 mission in 1969.
Astronomers have long been able to observe some
highlands and
mountains on Mars, and therefore guessed that there may be valleys, as well. In the 1970s this interpretation was proven correct by results from
space probes. Valleys have also been found on
Mercury and on the volcanic surfaces of
Venus and
Io.
The largest valley in our
solar system is the '
Valles Marineris' formation on
Mars. The ''Valles'' (which were first detected in
1877 by
Schiaparelli) are a huge
canyon system spanning 4,500 x 600 km in area and having a depth up to 8 km. These enormous dimensions are 4-8 times greater than those of the American
Grand Canyon. The ''Valles'' is currently understood to have been created by
tectonic forces like the main
grabens on Earth, rather than by running water. Later, though, it may have been ''expanded'' considerably by erosion, possibly including the action of surface water.
Icy moons of the gas planets
Jupiter,
Saturn and
Neptune were also photographed by the two
Voyagers as well as by other space probes. Some linear ruptures in the ice or apparent low areas between hills have been interpreted by
astrogeologists as tectonic structures or valleys similar to
grabens or active geologic
rifts on Earth.
See also
★
Canyon,
Vale,
Gorge,
Channel,
Gully
★
Clammy,
Cliff,
Glacial landforms,
Side valley
★
Geography,
Geomorphology,
Geodynamics,
Glaciology
★
List of landforms,
List of mountain ranges
★
Geological features of the solar system,
List of Lunar valleys
★
Martian mountains,
Lineaments on Europa,
Geologic features on Titan, (
escarpments and
ruptures).
References
1. Glossary of Glacier Terminology
External links
★
Univ.of Wisconsin
★
Glacial moraine types (LEO dictionary)
★
Glossary of Alpine Glacial Landforms
★
SAR interferometry (analysis of valley forms in Fig.2 and 6)
★
Shoulder of the Swiss Calanca valley near Braggio
★
Typical valley sections (=> U valleys and terrace valleys)
★
V-shaped valley
Extraterrestrial valleys
★
ESA image:
Vallis Alpes, bisecting the Lunar Alps
★
Valles Marineris and Ophir Chasma,
bilingual website (
English and
German)