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The Tracks of Water. Lots of Water.
In 1926, J. Harlen Bretz, a Northwest geologist, posited
during the most recent ice age, ten to fifteen thousand years
ago, one or more great floods formed the unique Palouse country
of Eastern Washington and carved the Columbia River Gorge. Sixteen
years earlier in 1910, unknown to Bretz, Joseph T. Pardee,
another geologist, proposed an ice dam blocked the Clark
Fork River in Montana creating a huge lake he named the Glacial
Lake Missoula. Initially, colleagues derided Bretz’s
theory. In 1940, Pardee published a paper detailing
what he believed were giant ripple marks on the land covered
by Lake Missoula. Some fifty feet high and two hundred
to five hundred feet apart, these ripples would be created
only by massive and rapidly flowing current. The sort
of current created by the sudden emptying of Lake Missoula. With
further observation by geologists, it became clear taken
together, the theories of Bretz and Pardee offered a natural
and logical explanation for the creation of many distinctive
geological features found west of Montana.
Today, it is generally accepted Bretz’s Ice Age Floods
carved the lands across Eastern Washington and cut the Columbia
River Gorge. Occurring as many as sixty-eight times
by some accounts, each flood lasted only a few days and released
ten times the annual water flow of all the world’s
rivers today. These floods stripped the rich soil from
the eastern plains, Flowing into the Willamette Valley where,
as a backwater, the current stopped and allowed the soil
to settle out. In places, this rich loam layer lies
over three hundred feet deep. “Erratic boulders”, boulders
of a rock type different from the immediate locale, have
been found across the Northwest. Geologists traced
many of these erratics back to the “mother” bedrock
in Montana and Idaho.
In Stevenson, the effects of the flood are clear and dramatic.
As you look at the Gorge walls, basalt layers from repeated
lava flows were exposed by the cutting action of millions
of cubic yards of water. We have our own ripple. The
island in the Columbia River just upstream of Multnomah
Falls is a remnant ripple of the massive flows. The
steep walls of the Columbia River Gorge are striped with
waterfalls. All these features are result of the Ice
Age Floods some ten thousand years ago.
In recent years, a group of geologists and naturalists banded
together to educate people about these great floods responsible
for features across much of the Northwest. As part
of the continuing education project, they proposed an Ice
Age Flood Trail, running from the ice dam on the Clark Fork
to the Pacific Ocean. With many scattered features,
the proposed “trail” becomes more a web with
a single starting point and a single finishing point.
This plan has been embraced by the Northwestern states and
the National Park Service plans to administer the Ice Age Trail
Where the Ice Age Trail Stands Today
On September 25, 2006, the House of Representatives passed
the Ice Age Flood Route bill. On November 16,
the Senate passed the Ice Age Flood Trail bill. Both
bills passed unanimously. The difference in the bills
lies in the title to the trail—being a “Trail” or
a “Route” --and the Senate bill included $12
million to fund the first stage of development. The
bills are currently in conference committee to determine
the final form.
For More Information:
Ice Age Floods Institute www.iafi.org
For information on the City of Stevenson and other
events
www.cityofstevenson.com
1-800-989-9178
509-427-8911
info@cityofstevenson.com
Other Links:
www.skamania.com
www.cgriversidelodge.com
www.econolodge.com
www.skamania.org
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