A transverse valley is a valley which cuts at right angles across a ridge[1] or, in mountainous terrain a valley that generally runs at right angles to the line of the main mountain chain or crest. Its geomorphological counterpart is the longitudinal valley.
During the course of a long valley, both forms may alternate.
Geologically transverse valleys frequently form a water gap where, during the course of earth history, the erosion of a river or large stream cuts a path through a mountain or hill range that stands tectonically at right angles to it.
The Val de Travers in the Jura Mountains is a longitudinal valley, despite its name.
See also
edit- Transverse Valleys (Chile)
References
edit- ^ Whittow, John (1984). Dictionary of Physical Geography. London: Penguin, 1984, p. 548. ISBN 0-14-051094-X.