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Thank you, very interesting geography. Any theories on how the river broke through the mountain range, i.e. the timeline for the erosion?

From my speculative chair, it looks like the river existed before the ranges.



This is a water gap, a feature which is commonly formed from a river older than the mountain range. In combination with that older river, in this case, the specific location was caused by "subrosion (a general expression applied to karst processes influencing the course of a river) and..meltwater channels at low altitudes" (Rohde 1994, Martini et al 2002-page 285).

-- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_gap

-- https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/book/10.1002/97814443042...

-- Rohde P, 1994. Weser und Leine am Berglandrand zur Ober- und Mittelterrassen-Zeit E&G Quaternary Science Journal 44(1): 106–133, DOI 10.3285/eg.44.1.10.


This makes me want to play with Chaim Gingold's Earth Primer!

http://www.earthprimer.com/

Earth Primer is a science book for playful people. Discover how Earth works through play—on your iPad. Join a guided tour of how Earth works, with the forces of nature at your fingertips. Visit volcanoes, glaciers, sand dunes. Play with them, look inside, and see how they work.

Earth Primer defies existing genres, combining aspects of science books, toys, simulations, and games. It is a new kind of interactive experience which joins the guided quality of a book with open ended simulation play.

Features:

• Discover how Earth works through play.

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• 20 different tools to unlock.

• Richly interactive geological simulations.

• Sandbox mode.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaim_Gingold

https://www.wired.com/2015/02/a-sandbox-for-the-anthropocene...

https://vimeo.com/116182914

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qtsf3nRFfwk


If memory serves me right, the mountains are a result of the last big ice age. Everything north was completely covered in a glacier. So the river beeing older does not seem unlikely.




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