Valleuse

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Location within France Le Havre dot.png
Location within France

In the Pays de Caux, Normandy, France a valleuse is a depression in the land surface of the plateau which permits access to the sea; it is sometimes translated into English as a "cliff hallow." [1] On the rest of this coast, that access is prevented by the height of the chalk cliffs. [2]

There are three (major) sorts:

There are also three types by stratigraphy:

  1. Simple,
  2. Resistant pedestal, and
  3. Complex. [2]

Origins

Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Mer et bateaux, 1883, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Note the one living and two perched Valleuses. Pierre-Auguste Renoir 081.jpg
Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Mer et bateaux, 1883, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Note the one living and two perched Valleuses.
Valleuse du Tilleul, near Etretat. Etretat 07 August 2005 034.jpg
Valleuse du Tilleul, near Étretat.

The word is peculiar to the Pays de Caux but the feature is not, though it shows itself particularly well there. The valleys developed while the water table was much higher in the chalk than it now is so that a stream flowed in each of these truncated valleys. It is likely that most of the formation of the valleys in the plateau occurred during cold periods. [2]

This region was never covered by an ice cap but it has been only about 230 kilometres from one. In those circumstances, the conditions will have been tundra, sometimes verging on periglacial. When the frozen ground thawed in the spring, the surface soil was very wet because the melted snow and ground water could not sink into the permafrost. Any appreciable slope on the surface will have induced slumping and erosion but we have a plateau so the slopes were not originally great.

During the glacial periods, the sea level was low enough to have emptied the English Channel to the north of the Pays de Caux. The truncated valleys in the chalk, represent the headwaters of streams flowing down to what is now the bottom of the sea. During the interglacials the sea eroded the coast and steepened the slope down which they flowed but they will have required ever wetter conditions to keep the water table in the chalk sufficiently high to make the streams flow. In the end, the sea cut the cliff back quicker than the streams cut the valleys downward.


References

  1. Michelin Green Guide Normandy (eBook). 2016. Retrieved 26 November 2024.
  2. 1 2 3 Marie-Françoise André, Monique Fort, ed. (2013). Landscapes and Landforms of France. Springer Netherlands. pp. 31–35. ISBN   9789400770225 . Retrieved 26 November 2024.
  3. Smith, Judy (2001). Holiday Walks in Normandy. Sigma Leisure. p. 148. ISBN   9781850587361 . Retrieved 26 November 2024.