COYOTE FLAT LANDSLIDE
Figure 9 - Sag (depression) in hanging val- ley, stranded above the main Coyote Flat / Sanger Meadow landslide bench. Drainage from the depression is to the left, over a gentle cascade down into Sanger Meadow. Sugarloaf mountain is on the viewer’s left. Sanger meadow and vicinity is the locus of numerous springs, marshes, and small lakes (© 10-22-2020, W. J. Elliott 139)
Figure 10 - Spring at head of Onion Creek, on east side of Sugarloaf Mountain (© 10-22-2020 W. J. Elliott 150)
Pakiser, L. C., Kane, M. F., and Jackson, W. H., 1964, Structural geology and volcanism of Owens Valley region, California: A geophysical study: United States Geological Survey, Professional Paper 438, 68 p. (Prepared in cooperation with the California Division of Mines and Geology.)
Phillips, Fred M., 2017-a, Stop 3.1: The Coyote Warp — why did it warp?, in Phillips, Fred M.; Levy, Drew; Hancock, Paul, eds, 2017 Friends of the Pleistocene guidebook, northern Owens Valley, 7 — 9 October 2017: Friends of the Pleistocene, p. 138-144.
Radbruch-Hall DH, Colton RB, Davis WE, Skipp BA, Lucchitta I, Varnes DJ (1976) Preliminary landslide over- view map of the conterminous United States. United States Geological Survey Miscellaneous Field Studies Map 771.
https://doi.org/10.3133/ mf771
United States Geological Survey, 1912, Mt. Goddard, California, 30’ topo- graphic map, scale 1:25,000, contour interval 100’.
United States Geological Survey, 1913, Bishop, California, 30’ topographic map, scale 1:125,000, contour inter- val 100’.
United States Geological Survey, 1947, Mariposa, topographic map, NJ 11-7, United States, scale 1:25,000 (1” = ~4 miles), contour interval 500’.
United States Geological Survey, 1948, Mt. Goddard, California, 15’ topo- graphic map, scale 1:62,500, contour interval 80’.
United States Geological Survey, 1949- a, Bishop, California, 15’ topographic map, scale 1:62,500, contour interval 80’.
United States Geological Survey, 1949-b, Mt. Tom, California, 15’ topographic
www.aipg.org
map, scale 1:62,500, contour interval 80’.
United States Geological Survey, 1950, Big Pine, California, 15’ topographic map, scale 1:62,500, contour interval 80’.
United States Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia, 1983, Sequoia and Kings Canyon, National Park Area Map, California, raised relief topographic map: produced by Hubbard Scientific, Inc., Chippewa Falls, WI 54729, scale 1:250,000, contour interval 200’, verti- cal exaggeration 2 to 1.
Wahrhaftig, Clyde, and Birman, J. H., 1965, The Quaternary of the Pacific mountain system in California (p. 299- 340), in Wright, H. E., Jr., and Frey, David G., eds., The Quaternary of the United States, A Review Volume for the VII Congress of the International Association for Quaternary Research, Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey, 922 p.
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