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The Elements of Geology by William Harmon Norton
page 99 of 414 (23%)
now in process of building by the floods of the frequently
shifting channels of the Oxus and other rivers of the region. For
about seven hundred miles from its mouth in Aral Lake the Oxus
receives no tributaries, since even the larger branches of its
system are lost in a network of distributaries and choked with
desert sands before they reach their master stream. These
aggrading rivers, which have channels but no valleys, spread their
muddy floods--which in the case of the Oxus sometimes equal the
average volume of the Mississippi--far and wide over the plain,
washing the bases of the desert dunes.

PLAYAS. In arid interior basins the central depressions may be
occupied by playas,--plains of fine mud washed forward from the
margins. In the wet season the playa is covered with a thin sheet
of muddy water, a playa lake, supplied usually by some stream at
flood. In the dry season the lake evaporates, the river which fed
it retreats, and there is left to view a hard, smooth, level floor
of sun-baked and sun-cracked yellow clay utterly devoid of
vegetation.

In the Black Rock desert of Nevada a playa lake spreads over an
area fifty miles long and twenty miles wide. In summer it
disappears; the Quinn River, which feeds it, shrinks back one
hundred miles toward its source, leaving an absolutely barren
floor of clay, level as the sea.

LAKE DEPOSITS. Regarding lakes as parts of river systems, we may
now notice the characteristic features of the deposits in lake
basins. Soundings in lakes of considerable size and depth show
that their bottoms are being covered with tine clays. Sand and
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