Location of Colorado Front Range

The Colorado Front Range can be subdivided into 6 major drainage basins: Cache la Poudre, Big Thompson, St. Vrain River, Clear Creek, Upper South Platte and South Platte Headwaters. Click on the map of the Colorado Front Range to learn more about each watershed.
(Maps created by E. Carlson, 2008)
Variability of Valley Bottoms in Colorado Front Range
The sources of varibility that effect valley bottoms of the Colorado Front Range include climatic variability, hillslope influences (e.g. fire and biodisturbance) anthropomorphic disturbance (e.g. beaver-trapping, timber harvest, placer-mining, tie-drivers, flow regulation, etc.), and flooding. The influence of each of these disturbances can vary based on both channel and valley characteristics. The concept of geomorphic process domains reflects how spatial variability in geomorphic processes governs temporal patterns of disturbances that influence ecosystem structure and dynamics (Montgomery, 1999). For example, spatial differences in flood magnitude and frequency, which exists in the Colorado Front Range, can be used to differentiate boundaries between distinct process domains. Above approximately 2300 m elevation in the Front Range, high flows occur regularly each spring and early summer in association with snowmelt runoff. Snowmelt runoff creates flooding at lower elevations, but late summer convective storms can also create rainfall flooding at elevations below approximately 2300 m. Rainfall-generated flash floods have much greater magnitude for a given drainage area, and occur more rapidly and unpredictably. The upper elevation limit for flash flooding corresponds relatively well with the lower elevation limit for Pleistocene-age valley glaciers in the Front Range.
Differences in flood hydroclimatology and fluvial versus glacial morphology in relation to elevation support the differentiation of process domains in the Front Range. We propose that eight process domains exist in the Colorado Front Range along valley bottoms, i.e., colluvial hollows, ephemeral channels, glaciated confined, glaciated partially confined, glaciated unconfined, unglaciated confined, unglaciated partially confined, unglaciated unconfined. The names of individual process domains reflect dominant characteristics. ‘Glaciated’ indicates areas above 2300 m elevation, and ‘unglaciated’ indicates areas below 2300 m elevation. ‘Confined’ refers to valley-bottom segments that are relatively narrow and steep, whereas ‘unconfined’ valley bottoms are much wider than the active channel. For each of these process domains different responses are expected for different disturbances. The expected response to each type of disturbance is described under the process domains tab and under each drainage basin.
