Alluvial fans are characteristic of mountainous terrain in arid to
semiarid climates, but are also found in more humid environments subject to intense rainfall and in areas of modern glaciation. They have also been found on other bodies of the
Solar System.
Terrestrial Alluvial fans are built in response to erosion induced by
tectonic uplift. The upwards coarsening of the beds making up the fan reflects cycles of erosion in the highlands that feed sediments to the fan. However, climate and changes in
base level may be as important as tectonic uplift. For example, alluvial fans in the Himalayas show older fans entrenched and overlain by younger fans. The younger fans, in turn, are cut by deep incised valleys showing two
terrace levels. Dating via
optically stimulated luminescence suggests a hiatus of 70,000 to 80,000 years between the old and new fans, with evidence of tectonic tilting at 45,000 years ago and an end to fan deposition 20,000 years ago. Both the hiatus and the more recent end to fan deposition are thought to be connected to periods of enhanced southwest
monsoon precipitation. Climate has also influenced fan formation in
Death Valley,
California, US, where dating of beds suggests that peaks of fan deposition during the last 25,000 years occurred during times of rapid climate change, both from wet to dry and from dry to wet. Alluvial fans are often found in
desert areas, which are subjected to periodic
flash floods from nearby
thunderstorms in local hills. The typical watercourse in an arid climate has a large, funnel-shaped basin at the top, leading to a narrow
defile, which opens out into an alluvial fan at the bottom. Multiple
braided streams are usually present and active during water flows.
Phreatophytes (plants with long tap
roots capable of reaching a deep
water table) are sometimes found in sinuous lines radiating from arid climate fan toes. These
fan-toe phreatophyte strips trace buried channels of coarse sediments from the fan that have interfingered with impermeable
playa sediments. Alluvial fans also develop in wetter climates when high-relief terrain is located adjacent to low-relief terrain. In
Nepal, the
Koshi River has built a
megafan covering some below its exit from
Himalayan foothills onto the nearly level plains where the river traverses into
India before joining the
Ganges. Along the upper Koshi tributaries, tectonic forces elevate the
Himalayas several millimeters annually. Uplift is approximately in equilibrium with erosion, so the river annually carries some of sediment as it exits the mountains. Deposition of this magnitude over millions of years is more than sufficient to account for the megafan. In
North America, streams flowing into
California's Central Valley have deposited smaller but still extensive alluvial fans, such as that of the
Kings River flowing out of the
Sierra Nevada. Like the Himalayan megafans, these are streamflow-dominated fans.
Extraterrestrial Mars Alluvial fans are also found on
Mars. Unlike alluvial fans on Earth, those on Mars are rarely associated with tectonic processes, but are much more common on crater rims. The crater rim alluvial fans appear to have been deposited by sheetflow rather than debris flows. Three alluvial fans have been found in
Saheki Crater. These fans confirmed past fluvial flow on the planet and further supported the theory that liquid water was once present in some form on the Martian surface. In addition, observations of fans in
Gale crater made by satellites from orbit have now been confirmed by the discovery of
fluvial sediments by the
Curiosity rover. Alluvial fans in Holden crater have toe-trimmed profiles attributed to fluvial erosion. The few alluvial fans associated with tectonic processes include those at Coprates Chasma and Juventae Chasma, which are part of the
Valles Marineris canyon system. These provide evidence of the existence and nature of faulting in this region of Mars.
Titan Alluvial fans have been observed by the
Cassini-Huygens mission on
Titan using the Cassini orbiter's
synthetic aperture radar instrument. These fans are more common in the drier mid-latitudes at the end of methane/ethane rivers where it is thought that frequent wetting and drying occur due to precipitation, much like arid fans on Earth. Radar imaging suggests that fan material is most likely composed of round grains of water ice or solid
organic compounds about two centimeters in diameter. ==Impact on humans==