About 20,000 years ago, man arrived in Colorado. Soon after this, the water supply of the valleys diminished greatly, and erosion slowed down correspondingly. The climate gradually became semiarid to arid. Many features of the natural scene were much as they must have been a century ago, without the highways, dams, and television aerials of today. Buffalo and many smaller types of game roamed the plains and foothills; deer, elk, and bighorn sheep were plentiful in the mountains. Nomadic tribes camped and hunted in both mountain and prairie. In the western part of the state, homes could be built in the shelter of great caves, as at [Mesa] Verde, and game could be supplemented with corn and squash planted on [plateau] surfaces.
Several features of Colorado scenery changed with increasing aridity. The [glaciers] of course were gone or nearly gone. Streams were no longer the violent torrents they had been. Many mountain lakes, filled with sediment and vegetation, became instead mountain meadows. And the once fertile intermontane valleys became deserts.
During the last Ice Age, elephant-like mastodons roamed Colorado. As present-day erosion removes sediments, bones, teeth, and tusks are frequently exposed, especially in the Prairie Province. (C. R. Knight painting, courtesy American Museum of Natural History)
On the eastern side of the San Luis Valley, the Great Sand Dunes developed at this time. These dunes nestle against the Sangre de Cristo Range, where strong southwesterly winds blowing across the wide valley tend to funnel toward Mosca and Music Passes. These winds lift loads of sand from the lightly vegetated valley floor, and drop it as they rise over the mountains. Where the sand is dropped, the dunes have formed. They rise to about 700 feet above the valley floor, and cover about forty square miles. The low rainfall of the area, seven to eight inches per year, keeps vegetation from creeping over the dunes and makes them a most distinctive feature of Colorado, a lesson in geology in the making.
* * * * * * * *
Geologic processes in Colorado now seem to be much reduced from what they were a few thousand years ago. Reduction in rainfall has led to reduced erosion. Mountain-building, having reached a climax in Tertiary time, has declined markedly. However, we find evidence that volcanism has occurred within the last few thousand years and faulting within the last few hundred, and Colorado streams rise after sudden mountain storms to approximate the violent torrents of glacial times. Colorado’s scenery, fashioned during some three billion years of earth history, is ever changing.
The Great Sand Dunes of Colorado were formed during Pleistocene and Recent time by deposition of quartz sand lifted from unconsolidated alluvial deposits in the San Luis Valley. The highest of the dunes rises 700 feet above the adjacent valley floor. (John Chronic photo)